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Talk:Estoppel in English law

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Estoppel of Equity[edit]

The Land Registration Act 2002 uses the phrase "estoppel of equity". Does anybody know if this means the same thing as "Equitable Estoppel", or if it is something different? In either case, the article should be updated to include it. JulesH 16:31, 11 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Estoppel in landlord and tenant[edit]

I hate to be negative, but I feel that while each section seems fine, the whole thing doesn't convey what estoppel is, and how it makes sense that these little snippets fit together.

To address my own heading, this section also doesn't include the role of estoppel in landlord and tenant law. Someone should probably write something about that (me). Lawdroid (talk) 22:02, 3 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Estoppel as per UN Charter article 80[edit]

UN Charter article 80 maintains rights obtained under the League of Nations. This is a formal codification of estoppel. Article 80, otherwise known by its authors as the Palestine clause, was supposed to maintain the rights of Jews to settle the Holy Land from the Mediterranean to the Jordan river and create a Jewish Homeland there (State of Israel). The Arabs had not been granted any political rights west of the Jordan River as they had been granted political rights east of the Jordan (Kingdom of Jordan) by Churchill in an illegal act contrary to the Palestine Mandate. Legality, when it came to Jewish rights have never bothered the British or the UN. Arab oil was far more important. But the principle of estoppel if it is to mean anything must be applied to Jewish rights in the name of truth, justice and peace. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2.101.238.14 (talk) 15:46, 16 August 2014 (UTC)[reply]