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Home Bare Acts Phrase: australiaCopyright Act, 1957 Complete Act
State: Central
Year: 1957
.....disclosed, if either the identity of the author is disclosed publicly by both the author and the publisher or is otherwise established to the satisfaction of the Copyright Board by that author. SECTION 24: TERM OF COPYRIGHT IN POSTHUMOUS WORK (1) In the case of a literary, dramatic or musical work or an engraving, in which copyright subsists at the date of the death of the author or, in the case of any such work of joint authorship, at or immediately before the date of the death of the author who dies last, but which, or any adaptation of which, has not been published before that date, copyright shall subsist until 17[sixty] years from the beginning of the calendar year next following the year in which the work is first published or, where an adaptation of the work is published in any earlier year, from the beginning of the calendar year next following that year. (2) For the purposes of this section a literary, dramatic or musical work or an adaptation of any such work shall be deemed to have been published, if it has been performed in public or if any 10[sound recording] made in respect of the work have been sold to the public or have been offered for sale to the public. .....
List Judgments citing this sectionMerchant Shipping Act, 1958 Complete Act
State: Central
Year: 1958
.....in 1867, 1882andagain in 1893and 1896 but all these attempts failed owing to legal and constitutional difficulties.Two of the principal contributory factors were the then limited powers of the Indian Legislature to legislate regarding shipping and the fact that part of the British Statute law on the subject, including parts of the Merchant Shipping Act, 1894, which is the principal United-Kingdom enactment on the subject, applied to Indian and any Indian enactment had to be in legal harmony with that law. A fresh attempt was made in 1921-22 to codify the Indian law on merchant shipping by the Statute Law Revision Committee, which decided that only consolidation, and not revision should be attempted immediately. The result was the Indian Merchant Shipping Act, 1923, which is now on the Statute Book and which consolidated some 21 existing Indian Acts on the subject. This Act has also been amended from time to time, the two major amendments being those made in 1933 and in 1953 so as to take power to implement the provisions of the international conventions with respect to load lines, 1930, and with respect to safety of life at sea, 1948, respectively, which have been ratified by.....
List Judgments citing this sectionMedical Council Act, 1956 Complete Act
State: Central
Year: 1956
.....be open to such person or medical college to rectify the defects, if any, specified by the Council; (b) consider the scheme, having regard to the factors referred to in sub-section (7), and submit the scheme together with its recommendations thereon to the Central Government. (4) The Central Government- may, after considering the scheme and the recommendations of the Council under sub-section (3) and after obtaining, where necessary, such other particulars as may be considered necessary by it from the person or college concerned, and having regard to the factors referred to in subsection (7), either approve (with such conditions, if any, as it may consider necessary) or disapprove the scheme and any such approval shall be a permission under sub-section (1) : Provided that no scheme shall be disapproved by the Central Government except after giving the person or college concerned a reasonable opportunity of being heard : Provided further that nothing in this sub-section shall prevent any person or medical college whose scheme has not been approved by the Central Government to submit a fresh scheme and the provisions of this section shall apply to such scheme, as if such scheme.....
List Judgments citing this sectionIndian Medical Council Act, 1956 Schedule III
Title: Third Schedule
State: Central
Year: 1956
.....and Surgery (Nat.) West Bengal L.M.S. (Nat.) (West Bengal) Certificate of qualification Certificate under Article by the State Medical Faculty under Article 6-D of the Statutes of the State Medical Faculty, West Bengal. 6-C (West Bengal) Certificate of qualification Certificate under Article by the State Medical Faculty under Article 6-D or 6-E of the Statutes of the State Medical Faculty, West Bengal 6-D or 6-E (West Bengal) Government of Bengal Licensed Medical Practitioner L.M.P. (Campbell Medical (Campbell Medical School) School) Diploma of Medical College, (Bengal) Dip. Med. Coll. (Bengal) Licensed Medical Practitioner L.M.P. (Dacca Medical (Dacca Medical School) School) (This qualification shall be a recognised medical qualification only when granted before the 15th August, 1947.) Diploma of Medical College (Calcutta) Dip. Med. Coll., (Calcutta) State Medical Faculty .....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionThe Punjab Land Reforms Act, 1972 Complete Act
State: Punjab
Year: 1972
.....it includes " sites of buildings, and other structures of such land". In the context in which clause (a) appears in section 2(5) and in view of the fact that there is a comma after the words "sites of buildings" we are of the view that the words "sites" in clause (a) does not qualify the words "other structures on such land" It should be interpreted as including other structures on such land as also sites of buildings. Bal Raj Ahuja vs State of Punjab and another, 1988 PLJ 423. 3 Definitions - In this Act' unless the context otherwise requires" (1) "appointed day" means the twenty-fourth day of January, 1971; (2) "banjar land" means land which has remained uncultivated for a continuous period of not less than four years immediately preceding the date on which the question whether such land is banjar or not arises; (3) "Collector" means the Collector of the district or any other officer not below the rank of Assistant Collector of the first grade empowered in this behalf by the State Government; (4) "family" in relation to a person means the person, the wife or husband, as the case may be, of such person and his or her minor children other than a married minor daughter;.....
List Judgments citing this sectionMerchant Shipping Act, 1958 Section 356A
Title: Application
State: Central
Year: 1958
.....book of the ship and may require the master of the ship to certify the copy to be a true copy and such copy shall be admissible as evidence of the facts stated therein. 356H. Information regarding contravention of the provision of the Convention.-- (1) If, on report from a surveyor or other persons authorised to inspect a vessel under section 356G, the Central Government is satisfied that any provision of the Convention has been contravened anywhere by a foreign ship, being a ship to which the provisions of the Convention apply, it shall transmit particulars of the alleged contravention to the Government of the country to which the ship belongs. (2) On receipt of information from the Government of any country which has ratified the Convention that an Indian ship has contravened any provisions of the Convention, the Central Government may, if it deems it necessary so to do, request such Government to furnish further details of the alleged contravention, and if satisfied that sufficient evidence is available to establish contravention of any of the provisions of this Part or rules made thereunder take appropriate action against the owner or master and intimate the reporting.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionMerchant Shipping Act, 1958 Section 356B
Title: Definitions
State: Central
Year: 1958
.....hydrofoil boats, air-cushion vehicles, submersibles, floating craft and fixed or floating platforms.] ______________________ 1.Substituted for Section 356B by the Merchant Shipping (Amendment) Act, 2003. Prior to substitution, its read as under: 356B. Definitions.-- In this Part, unless the context otherwise requires,-- (a) "cargo" includes ballast and ship's stores and fuel; (b) "coast" includes any island forming part of India; (c) "coastal waters" means any part of the territorial waters of India, or any marine areas adjacent thereto over which India has, or, may hereafter have exclusive jurisdiction in regard to control of marine pollution under the Territorial Waters, Continental Shelf, Exclusive Economic Zone and other Maritime Zones Act, 1976, or any other law for the time being in force; (d) "Convention" means the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution of the Sea by Oil, 1954, signed in London on the 12th day of May, 1954, as amended from time to lime; (e) "discharge", in relation to oil or oily mixture, means any discharge ore-scope, howevercaused; (f) the expression "from nearest land" shall mean the baseline from which the.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionIndian Medical Council Act, 1956 Schedule II
Title: Second Schedule
State: Central
Year: 1956
THE SECOND SCHEDULE (See section 12) RECOGNISED MEDICAL QUALIFICATIONS GRANTED BY MEDICAL INSTITUTIONS OUTSIDE INDIA. Country Title Nature of qualifications as stated in diploma Abbreviation UNITED KINGDOM University of Birmingham M.B.Ch.B. Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery U.Birm. M.D. Doctor of Medicine Ch.M. Master of Surgery University of Bristol M.B.Ch.B. Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery U. Brist. M.D. Doctor of Medicine Ch.M. Master of Surgery University of Cambridge M.B.B.Chir. Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery U.Camb. M.D. Doctor of Medicine M.Chir. Master of Surgery University of M.B.B.S. Bachelor of Medicine and U.Durh. Durham Bachelor of Surgery M.D. .....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionCarriage by Air Act, 1972 Schedule 3
Title: The Third Schedule
State: Central
Year: 1972
.....relating to the weight, dimensions and packing of the cargo, as well as those relating to the number of packages, are prima facie evidence of the facts stated therein; those relating to the quantity, volume and condition of the cargo do not constitute evidence against the carrier except so far as they both have been, and are stated in the air waybill or the cargo receipt to have been, checked by it in the presence of the consignor, or relate to the apparent condition of the cargo. 12. (1) Subject to its liability to carry out all its obligations under the contract of carriage, the consignor has the right to dispose of the cargo by withdrawing it at the airport of departure or destination, or by stopping it in the course of the journey on any landing, or by calling for it to be delivered at the place of destination or in the course of the journey to a person other than the consignee originally designated, or by requiring it to be returned to the airport of departure. The consignor shall not exercise this right of disposition in such a way as to prejudice the carrier or other consignors and shall reimburse any expenses occasioned by the exercise of this right. (2) If it is.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionCitizenship Act, 1955 Schedule I
Title: The First Schedule (Omitted)
State: Central
Year: 1955
1[Omitted] _______________________ 1.Schedule 1Omitted by Citizenship Amendt Act, 2003 (6 of 2004). Prior to omission it was read as: THE FIRST SCHEDULE [ See sections 2(1)(b) and 5(1)(e)] A.The following Commonwealth countries: 1. United Kingdom. 2. Canada. 3. Commonwealth of Australia. 4. New Zealand. 5. Union of South Africa. 6. Pakistan. 7. Ceylon. 8. Federation of Rhodesia and Nayasaland. 9. Ghana 10. Federation of Malaya 11. Singapore B. The Republic of Ireland. Explanation.- In this Schedule, "United Kingdom" means the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and includes the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and all Colonies; and "Commonwealth of Australia" includes the territories of Papua and the territory of Norfolk Island.
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