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Home Bare Acts Phrase: founding fatherIndian Evidence Act 1872 Section 32
Title: Cases in Which Statement of Relevant Fact by Person Who is Dead or Cannot Be Found, Etc., is Relevant
State: Central
Year: 1872
.....procured, without an amount of delay or expense which under the circumstances of the case appears to the Court unreasonable, are themselves relevant facts in the following cases:-- (1) when it relates to cause of death.-When the statement is made by a person as to the cause of his death, or as to any of the circumstances of the transaction which resulted in his death, in cases in which the cause of that person's death comes into question. Such statements are relevant whether the person who made them was or was not, at the time when they were made, under expectation of death, and whatever may be the nature of the proceeding in which the cause of his death comes into question. (2) or is made in course of business.-When the statement was made by such person in the ordinary course of business, and in particular when it consists of any entry or memorandum made by him in books kept in the ordinary course of business, or in the discharge of professional duly; or of an acknowledgment written or signed by him of the receipt of money, goods, securities or property of any kind; or of a document used in commerce written or signed by him; or of the date of a letter or other document.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionChristian Marriage Act1872 Section 19
Title: Consent of Father, or Guardian, or Mother
State: Central
Year: 1872
The father, if living, of any minor, or, if the father be dead, the guardian of the person of such minor, and, in case there be no such guardian, then the mother of such minor, may give consent to the minor's marriage, and such consent is hereby required for the same marriage, unless no person authorized to give such consent be resident in India.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionINDIAN SUCCESSION ACT, 1925 Section 43
Title: Where intestate's father dead, but his mother, brothers and sisters living
State: Central
Year: 1925
If the intestate's father is dead, but the intestate's mother is living and there are also brothers or sisters of the intestate living, and there is no child living of any deceased brother or sister, the mother and each living brother or sister shall succeed to the property in equal shares. Illustration A dies intestate, survived by his mother and two brothers of the full blood, John and Henry and a sister Mary, who is the daughter of his mother but not of his father. The mother takes one-fourth, each brother takes one-fourth and Mary, the sister of half blood, takes one-fourth.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionINDIAN SUCCESSION ACT, 1925 Section 44
Title: Where intestate's father dead and his mother, a brother or sister, and children of any deceased brother or sister living
State: Central
Year: 1925
If the intestate's father is dead but the intestate's mother is living, and if any brother or sister and the child or children of any brother or sister who may have died in the intestate's lifetime are also living, then the mother and each living brother or sister, and the living child or children of each deceased brother or sister, shall be entitled to the property in equal shares, such children (if more than one) taking in equal shares only the shares which their respective parents would have taken if living at the intestate's death. Illustration A, the intestate, leaves his mother, his brothers John and Henry, and also one child of a deceased sister, Mary, and two children of George, a deceased brother of the half blood who was the son of his father but not of his mother. The mother takes one-fifth, John and Henry each take one-fifth, the child of Mary takes one-fifth, and the two children of George divide the remaining one-fifth equally between them.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionINDIAN SUCCESSION ACT, 1925 Section 42
Title: Where intestate's father living
State: Central
Year: 1925
If the intestate's father is living, he shall succeed to the property.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionINDIAN SUCCESSION ACT, 1925 Section 45
Title: Where intestate's father dead and his mother and children of any deceased brother or sister living
State: Central
Year: 1925
If the intestate's father is dead, but the intestate's mother is living, and the brothers and sisters are all dead, but all or any of them have left children who survived the intestate, the mother and the child or children of each deceased brother or sister shall be entitled to the property in equal shares, such children (if more than one) taking in equal shares only the shares which their respective parents would have taken if living at the intestate's death. Illustration A, the intestate, leaves no brother or sister but leaves his mother and one child of deceased sister, Mary and two children of deceased brother George. The mother takes one-third, the child of Mary takes one-third, and the children of George divide the remaining one-third equally between then.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionINDIAN SUCCESSION ACT, 1925 Section 46
Title: Where intestate's father dead, but his mother living and no brother, sister, nephew or niece
State: Central
Year: 1925
If the intestate's father is dead, but the intestate's mother is living, and there is neither brother, nor sister, nor child of any brother or sister of the intestate, the property shall belong to the mother.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionIndian Succession Act, 1925 Section 47
Title: Where Intestate Has Left Neither Lineal Descendant, nor Father, nor Mother
State: Central
Year: 1925
Where the intestate has left neither lineal descendant, nor father, nor mother, the property shall be divided equally between his brothers and sisters and the child or children of such of them as may have died before him, such children (if more than one) taking in equal shares only the shares which their respective parents would have taken if living at the intestate's death.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionBombay Prevention of Begging Act, 1959, (Maharashtra) Section 5
Title: Summary Inquiry in Respect of Persons Found Begging and their Detention
State: Maharashtra
Year: 1959
.....aforesaid is a child, being a child who is not under the age of five years, the Court shall forward him to a Juvenile Court, and shall not made any order under sub-section (5). The Juvenile Court shall deal with the child under section 40 of the Bombay Children Act, 1948, as if the child were a person described in clause (a) of that section. For the purpose of ascertaining the age of the person, the Court may, if necessary cause the beggar to be examined by a medical officer. NOTES The problem of beggars had became extremely acute, particularly in major urban centres like Bombay, Poona, Nagpur, Sholapur. etc. The total population of beggars all over the State of Maharashtra was estimated at about 1.50,000 of which about 75,000 were estimated to be in Greater Bombay alone. Of these 75,000 about 45.000 were estimated to be able-bodied beggars. In order to obviate the nuisance of beggars from Greater Bombay first and then from other areas in the State Government had decided to undertake immediately a crash programme for massive arrests of beggars in Greater Bombay and for taking necessary proceedings against them under the Bombay Prevention of Begging Act, 1959. Where the.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionPublic Gambling Act 1867 Section 4
Title: Penalty for Being Found in Gaming-house
State: Central
Year: 1867
Whoever is found in any such house, walled enclosure, room or place, playing or gaming with cards, dice, counters, money or other instruments of gaming, or is found there present for the purpose of gaming, whether playing for any money, wager, stake or otherwise, shall be liable to a fine not exceeding one hundred rupees, or to imprisonment of either description, as defined in the Indian Penal Code, for any term not exceeding one month, and any person found in any common gaming-house during any gaming or playing therein shall be presumed, until the contrary be proved, to have been there for the purpose of gaming.
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