Journal of the Institute of Actuaries and Assurance Magazine, Bind 16

Forsideomslag
Charles & Edwin Layton, 1872

Fra bogen

Indhold

Andre udgaver - Se alle

Almindelige termer og sætninger

Populære passager

Side 19 - A policy of insurance effected by any married man on his own life, and expressed upon the face of it to be for the benefit of his wife, or of his wife and children, or any of them, shall enure and be deemed a trust for the benefit of his wife for her separate use, and of his children or any of them, according to the interest so expressed, and shall not, so long as any object of the trust remains, be subject to the control of the husband or to his creditors, or form part of his estate. When the sum...
Side 362 - ... exclusive of buildings, unless such buildings are insured and the policy transferred to said company; and also, in the stocks of this State, or stocks or treasury notes of the United States; and also, in the...
Side 83 - These reasons have been already pointed out : the mischief of overloading the chief functionaries of Government with demands on their attention, and diverting them from duties which they alone can discharge, to objects which can be sufficiently well attained without them : the danger of unnecessarily swelling the direct power and indirect influence of Government...
Side 5 - In the case of a Company established after the passing of this Act, transacting other Business besides that of Life Assurance, a separate Account shall be kept of all receipts in respect of the life assurance and annuity contracts of the Company, and the said receipts shall be carried to and form a separate Fund to be called the Life Assurance Fund...
Side 260 - Beverley arranges his instrument so that the quantity of angular motion is proportional to the distance of the tracer from a certain straight line; it is at the same time proportional to the extent of the actual. displacement, and hence tbo indication is proportional to the area of the rectangle.
Side 83 - But though a better organization of governments would greatly diminish the force of the objection to the mere multiplication of their duties, it would still remain true that in all the more advanced communities, the great majority of things are worse done by the intervention of government, than the individuals most interested in the matter would do them, or cause them to be done, if left to themselves.
Side 8 - ... amalgamation or transfer is therein fully set forth, and that no other payments beyond those set forth have been made or are to be made either in money, policies, bonds, valuable securities, or other property by or with the knowledge of any parties to the said amalgamation or transfer. 16. The Board of Trade may...
Side 6 - Every assurance company shall, once in every five years, or at such shorter intervals as may be prescribed by the instrument constituting the company, or by its regulations or byelaws...
Side 83 - The true reasons in favour of leaving to voluntary associations all such things as they are competent to perform, would exist in equal strength if it were certain that the work itself would be as well or better done by public officers.

Bibliografiske oplysninger