Online Encyclopedia

BOUND, or BOUNDARY (from O. Fr. bonde...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 324 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BOUND, or BOUNDARY (from O. Fr. bonde, Med.
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Lat. bodena or butina, a frontier
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line)
  , that which serves to indicate the limit or extent of
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land . It is usually defined by a certain mark, such as a
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post, ditch, hedge, dyke, wall of stones, &c., though on the other hand it may have to be ascertained by reference to a plan or by measurement . In law, the exact boundary of land is always a
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matter of evidence; where no evidence is available, the court acts on presumption . For example, the boundary of land on opposite sides of a road, whether public or private, is presumed to be the
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middle
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line of the road . Where two fields are separated by a hedge and ditch the boundary line will run between the hedge and the ditch . Boundaries of parishes, at
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common law, depended upon ancient and immemorial custom, and in many parishes
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great care was taken to perpetuate the boundaries of the parish by perambulations from time to time . The confusion of
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local boundaries in England was the subject of several commissions and committees in the 19th century, and much information will be found in their reports (1868, 1870, 1873, 1888) . The Local Government Act 1888, ss . 50-63, contains provisions for the alteration of local areas .

End of Article: BOUND, or BOUNDARY (from O. Fr. bonde, Med. Lat. bodena or butina, a frontier line)
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