The gross estate consists of all property, whether real or personal, tangible or intangible, including "all property in which the decedent had an interest at the time of his or her death and certain property transferred during the lifetime of the decedent without adequate consideration; certain property held jointly by the decedent with others; property over which the decedent had a general power of appointment; proceeds of certain insurance policies on the decedent's life; dower or
curtesy of a surviving spouse; and certain life estate property for which the marital deduction was previously allowed." Specific items of gross estate include real estate, cash, stocks, bonds, businesses, and decedent-owned life insurance policies, among others.
One of those is ladies night when all the players will be dressing up in black suits -
curtesy of Moss Bros - and serving the guests with food and drinks.
The annual event, this year sponsored by Bank of Ireland, hosted teams from across the Midlands business and legal community fighting it out for top prize of four flights to New York
curtesy of Continental Airlines.
In fact, recent discussions by Coletti ("'
Curtesy'") and Scoville (Saints 30-47) of the "courtliness" of the play's Mary Magdalene (her upper-class background, her courtesy and tastes) point to elements that would have signaled to the audience the appropriateness of romance connections in the representation of the protagonist.
In '"
Curtesy doth it yow lere"': The Sociology of Transgression in the Digby Mary Magdalene', ELH 71 (2004), 1-28, Coletti posits the influence of courtesy texts such as How the Good Wife Taught her Daughter in the play's construction of Mary Magdalene's character.
He said the constitution still contains references to local judgeships and rights of dower and
curtesy which have been abolished by the legislature.
And he later tells residents that refreshments will be provided "
curtesy" of a local playgroup - instead of courtesy.
Mutual wills are functionally similar to the old common law doctrines of 'dower' and '
curtesy', abolished during the 19th century, and area reflection of the private ordering of family property in a system based on separate property of husband and wife.
According to the mid-fifteenth-century Boke of
Curtesy, which says nothing on how to hunt, it was necessary for the noble child to have a knowledge of what money was due to the huntsmen, the bread they were owed, and the number of bones that should be given to each dog.