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overreach
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The answer OVERREACH has 20 possible clue(s) in existing crosswords.
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The word OVERREACH is VALID in some board games. Check OVERREACH in word games in Scrabble, Words With Friends, see scores, anagrams etc.
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Definitions of overreach in various dictionaries:
verb - fail by aiming too high or trying too hard
verb - beat through cleverness and wit
To reach or extend over or beyond.
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Keep reading for additional results and analysis below.
Possible Dictionary Clues |
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reach out too far. |
to fail by trying to achieve, spend, or do more than you can manage: |
fail by aiming too high or trying too hard |
beat through cleverness and wit |
Reach out too far. |
Get the better of by cunning outwit. |
An injury to a forefoot of a horse resulting from its having overreached. |
To reach or extend over or beyond. |
To miss by reaching too far or attempting too much: overreach a goal. |
To defeat (oneself) by going too far or by doing or trying to gain too much. |
Overreach might refer to |
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Overreaching is a concept in English land law and the Law of Property Act 1925. It refers to a situation where a person's equitable property right is dissolved, detached from a piece of property, and reattached to money that is given by a third party for the property. This happens, according to City of London Building Society v Flegg in any case where property is bought or mortgaged in a contract with two or more title holders. * Overreaching can only exist where a trust is in existence and a property is sold. It occurs when the purchaser paid to at least two trustees in monies. The occupiers of a property in such a situation cannot then claim that their occupation of the property is an overriding interest, as the joint trustees have brought that occupation to a close through the sale of the property. * By purchasing the property from trustees, under Section 2 of the Law of Property Act 1925, the occupation rights of any other party are automatically extinguished. If such a party claims an overriding interest in the land, that interest is converted by attaching a monetary interest to the land, such as a purchase price, and the interest claimed by the party is 'overreached'; this conversion is often referred to as the doctrine of equitable conversion. * If only one owner exists, there is a risk that a third party could claim occupation and overreaching cannot apply. * The issues of overreaching and overriding interests are often closely linked, and the case of Birmingham Midshires v Sabherwal examined both issues. * Overreaching is a process whereby certain equitable rights in land which might otherwise have enjoyed protection in the system of registration on the occasion of a sale of that land to a purchaser for value are "swept off" the land and transferred to the purchase money that has just been paid. |