| Roman law - 1876 - 566 pages
...be established in possession, and the owner of the ground claim the house as his own, and will not pay the price of the materials and the wages of the workmen, he can be met have already said (see note on p. 89), might follow the sentence in the was preliminary... | |
| Possession (Roman law) - 1880 - 160 pages
...the building be pulled down. And yet if the owner of the soil ^ sues for the building, and will not pay the price of the materials and the wages of the workmen, he can be met by the plea of fraud, at any rate if the builder did not know that the soil was another's,... | |
| Böhm-Bawerk - Capital - 1884 - 536 pages
...und damit den Kapitalgewinn offen lassen, können diese Aeusserungen wohl keinen Ani) ,In txchanging the complete manufacture either for money, for labour, or for other goods, over and above what may be sufflcient to pay the priee of the materials and the wages o( the workmen, something must be given... | |
| Law reports, digests, etc - 1884 - 776 pages
...built was honestlyin possession of the land, and theowner of the soil claimed tha building, but refused to pay the price of the materials and the wages of the workmen, the claim of the owner might be rejected. I am disposed to think that the purchaser of a tenure, at... | |
| Richard Burdon Haldane Haldane (Viscount) - Economists - 1887 - 184 pages
...make a profit by the sale of their work, or by what their labour adds to the value of the materials. In exchanging the complete manufacture either for...the undertaker of the work who hazards his stock in this adventure. The value which the workmen add to the materials therefore resolves itself in this... | |
| David Nasmith - Roman law - 1890 - 664 pages
...of which the builder was confirmed in possession, should plead that the edifice is his, and refuse to pay the price of the materials and the wages of the workmen, that then such proprietor may be repelled by an exception of fraud ; and this may assuredly be done... | |
| Adam Smith - Economics - 1894 - 526 pages
...additional price fixed upon them. Men must then pay for the licence to gather them ; and in exchanging them either for money, for labour, or for other goods, over and above what is due, both for the labour ot gathering them, and for the profits of the stock which employs that... | |
| Edwin Cannan - Economics - 1903 - 458 pages
...purchase, command, or exchange for.' After the original state of things has passed away, however, ' in exchanging the complete manufacture either for...the undertaker of the work who hazards his stock in this adventure ' (Bk. I. ch. vi. p. 22). Dr. Bohm-Bawerk says that this plainly means that the capitalist's... | |
| Economics - 1905 - 650 pages
...computation, it does not at all matter in what form or terms the payments are made. And so again, in chap. 6: Over and above what may be sufficient to pay the price...of the work who hazards his stock in the adventure .... the profits of the employer upon the whole stock of labor and materials which he advanced. No... | |
| Herbert Joseph Davenport - Economics - 1907 - 780 pages
...to pay for the price of the materials and the wages of the workmen" — employer's outlay cost — "something must be given for the profits of the undertaker of the work who hazards his stock in the venture." Risk cost? "The value which the workmen add to the materials, therefore, resolves itself,... | |
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