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Draft of attorney's letter to the court, 1928
Draft of a letter written by the attorney of several people in objection to a court's sentence and asking to delay executing the order and to summon the plaintiff to the court; the lawyers' clients are: Khanum Mah (wife of Ra’is Muhammad Ja‘far), Khanum Tuba (wife of Karbalayi Ghulam Riza), Khanum Saltanat (wife of Aqa Buzurg [illegible]), Khanum Zaman (wife of Haji Mirza Khalil), and Haji Mirza Khalil
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Power of attorney, 1912
Power of attorney given by Khanum ‘Uzra, daughter of the late Haji Sayyid Muhammad Pish-namaz [the prayer leader] and divorcee of Mirza Hasan Khan, to Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin Saham al-Shari'ah in order to receive her share of two sides of a house located in Maydan-shah neighborhood that Rayhan, Baba Khan, and Ya‘qub have usurped.
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Power of attorney over a land dispute, 1922
Power of attorney to Sayyid Muhammad Razi over a disputed property known as Zinat Khanum (wife of Mirza Ahmad Kababi)'s land, which the client purchased from Mirza Shafi‘ forty-five years ago during Shahzadah Haji Hisam al-Saltanah's government. This property is currently seized by Aqa Naqi, the steward for the late Mirza Mir Iftikhar.
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Power of attorney to get inheritance, 1906
Power of attorney given to Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin, son of Haji Muhammad Hasan from Shiraz, by Khavar Sultan, daughter of Muhammad Khan and wife of Mashhadi Nasir from Shiraz to last up to six months from the time of this contract in order to get back the inherited house of her deceased husband. The house should have been transferred to Khavar Sultan and her children, but Muhammad Husayn Ghali-furush [the rug dealer] has usurped it. Dated August 14, 1906
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Letter of Rubab Sultan's lawyer about the ownership of a farm, 1922
Draft of a letter written by Saham al-Dawlah, the attorney of Rubab Sultan (daughter of the late Mirza ‘Ali Akbar) against Mirza Abu al-Hasan Khan I‘timad al-Mamalik regarding the ownership of a farm that, based on a settlement contract, belongs to Rubab Sultan but Abu al-Hasan has usurped it
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Power of attorney to receive inheritance, 1918
Power of attorney given by the daughter of the late Sadr al-Atibba’ to Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin, known as Saham al-Shari‘ah, in order to get her share of her deceased father's inheritance, along with the ownership of three stores, and her share of a house that her brother, Mirza ‘Ali Asghar Khan, has falsely occupied. On the margin, the claim has been rejected.
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Letters of a lawyer to the court about his clients, 1929
Draft of two letters written by a lawyer to the court about his client's rent, a local investigation about usurpation of possessions of his two other clients, and some other petitions and sentences
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Letter by Khanum Muhtaram's lawyer about the evacuation of a room, 1929
Draft of the letter written by Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin, the attorney of Khanum Muhtaram, to the Justice Department of Fars about the evacuation of a room in a house located in Bazar-i Murgh neighborhood usurped by Zahra Baygum. She has also occupied some of the other rooms of that house with all the furniture without the owner's permission.
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Usurpation of Khanum Sardar's property
Petition by Muhammad Yusuf Khan from Harat to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs regarding the Government of Khurasan and Jalal al-Sultan, who has confiscated the property of Khanum Sardar in Himmat Abad and requests money in order to return the property. Since Khanum Sardar had transferred the property to Muhammad Yusuf Khan, he is asked to provide the money. Muhammad Yusuf Khan has been informed that due to his delay in the payment, the property has been sold off by Khanum Sardar's attorney. He deems this transaction unlawful and asks for justice.
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Gulchihrah Khanum's claims, 1919
1- Muhammad Husayn confirms that any writing by Gulchihrah, the daughter of Mirza ‘Abd al-Karim from Sanandaj, transferring one sixth of a property in Quzlu, her sole source of income, to her brother, Mirza ‘Ali Khan Amin al-Mamalik, is null and void. He testifies that Gulchihrah's addiction to opium has resulted in the decline of her mental capacities, which is apparent to the people close to her, including the writer. Gulchihrah stated that some people, incited by Amin al-Mamalik, had come from Takan Tappah to her house, and while she was under the influence of opium, coerced her into...