reddendum

from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Reddendum \Red*den"dum\ (r?d*d?n"d?m), n. [Neut. of L. reddendus
   that must be given back or yielded, gerundive of reddere. See
   {Reddition}.] (Law)
   A clause in a deed by which some new thing is reserved out of
   what had been granted before; the clause by which rent is
   reserved in a lease. --Cruise.
   [1913 Webster]
    
from Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)
REDDENDUM, contracts. A word used substantively, and is that clause in a 
deed by which the grantor reserves something new to himself out of that 
which he granted before, and thus usually follows the tenendum, and is 
generally in these words "yielding and paying." 
     2. In every good reddendum or reservation, these things must concur; 
namely,  1. It must be apt words. 2, It must be of some other thing issuing 
or coming out of the thing granted, and not a part of the thing itself, nor 
of something issuing out of another thing. 3. It must be of such thing on 
which the grantor may resort to distrain 4. It must be made to one of the 
grantors and not to a stranger to the deed. Vid 2 Bl. Com. 299; Co. Litt. 
47; Touchs 80; Cruise, Dig. tit. 32, c. 24, s. 1; Dane' Ab. Index, h.t. 
    

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