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Home Bare Acts Phrase: concomitantMines Act, 1952 Chapter I
Title: Preliminary
State: Central
Year: 1952
.....by Act 42 of 1983, section 2 (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). 13. Substituted by Act 42 of 1983, section 3, for clauses (q) and (r) (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). Section 3 - Act not to apply in certain cases 1 [3. Act not to apply in certain cases (1) The provisions of this Act, except those contained in 2 [sections 7, 8, 9,40, 45 and 46, shall not apply to-- (a) any mine or part thereof in which excavation is being made for prospecting purposes only and not for the purpose of obtaining minerals for use or sale; Provided that -- (i) not more than twenty persons are employed on any one day in connection with any such excavation; (ii) the depth of the excavation measured from its highest to its lowest point nowhere exceeds six metres or, in the case of an excavation for coal, fifteen metres; and (iii) no part of such excavation extends below superjacent ground; or (b) any mine engaged in the extraction of kankar, murrum, laterite, boulder, gravel, single, ordinary sand (excluding moulding sand, glass sand and other mineral sands), ordinary clay (excluding kaolin, china clay, white clay or fire clay), building stone, 3 [slate] road metal, earth, fullers earth 3 [marl, chalk] and.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionMines Act, 1952 Section 2
Title: Definitions
State: Central
Year: 1952
.....ground; and (b) "above ground" if he is working in an open cast working or in any other manner not specified inclause (a)]. ________________________ 1. Re-numbered as sub-section (1) by Act 62 of 1959, section 2 (w.e.f. 16-1-1960). 2. Clause (a) omitted by Act 42 of 1983, section 2 3. Substituted by Act 42 of 1983 section 2, for clause (c) (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). 4. Substituted by Act 42 of 1983, section 2, for clause (h) (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). 5. Clause (ii) omitted by Act 42 of 1983, section 2 (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). 6. Substituted by Act 42 of 1983, section 3, for clause (j) (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). 7. Clause (jjj) omitted by Act 42 of 1983, section 2 (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). 8. Inserted by Act 62 of 1959, section 2 (w.e.f. 16-1-1960). 9. Certain words omitted by Act 42 of 1983, section 2 (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). 10. Substituted by Act 42 of 1983, section 2, for "any contractor" (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). 11. Substituted by Act 42 of 1983 section 2, for clause (n) (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). 12. Inserted by Act 42 of 1983, section 2 (w.e.f. 31-5-1984). 13. Substituted by Act 42 of 1983, section 3, for clauses (q) and (r) (w.e.f. 31-5-1984).
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionMines Act, 1952 Complete Act
State: Central
Year: 1952
.....below:- (i) At present workshops run by a mine for the maintenance of its machinery and plant in safe and efficient working order are subject to the Factories Act, 1948. which is administered by Provincial Governments. Workers in workshops such as Fitters, blacksmiths, welders, electricians and others requently work for a. part of the shift underground and while so employed Come within the scope of the Mines Act. It is inconvenient that the same personnel should be subject to two different Acts administered by two different authorities. It is now proposed to bring all personnel engaged solely on work relating to mines within the scope of the Mines Act. For similar reasons it is proposed to bring within the scope of the Mines Act ower stations which generate power used wholly In connection with the mine concerned. (ii) Provision has been made in the Bill for the issue of adolescents and the appointment of certifying surgeons. (iii) The provisions in the existing Act regarding conservancy and sanitary conveniences are of a general nature. , The Bill provides for more definite arrangements for drinking water, latrines, urinals, etc. (iv) It has been made obligatory on the part of.....
List Judgments citing this sectionPublic Debt Act, 1944 Complete Act
State: Central
Year: 1944
.....more widely than ordinary negotiable commercial instruments by various classes of investors in addition to the financial and business community. The fact that Government loans were almost entirely in the form of promissory notes meant that the special modifications of the law, effected from time to time to meet practical difficulties only related to Government obligations held in this form, with the result that when the previous legislation was revised in the Act of 1920, a clear distinction was not always drawn between those parts of the law which ought to relate to Government securities as a whole and those which merely related to promissory notes. A striking instance of this is provided by section 13(Act X of 1920) providing for the summary provisional settlement of disputes, which is confined only to promissory notes. Although logically imperfect, this position did not in the past lead to any practical difficulties as the holders of Government loans in the form of stock certificates were comparatively few. As a result of war conditions however, and the efforts of the Reserve Bank as agent of Government in the management of public debt to popularize stock certificate in the.....
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