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Home Bare Acts Phrase: grantor Page 1 of about 43 results ( seconds)INDIAN EASEMENTS ACT, 1882 Section 57
Title: Grantor's duty to disclose defects
State: Central
Year: 1882
The grantor of a licence is bound to disclose to the licensee any defect in the property affected by the licence, likely to be dangerous to the person or property of the licensee, of which the grantor is, and the licensee is not, aware.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionINDIAN EASEMENTS ACT, 1882 Section 59
Title: Grantor's transferee not bound by licence
State: Central
Year: 1882
When the grantor of the licence transfers the property affected thereby, the transferee is not as such bound by the licence.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionINDIAN EASEMENTS ACT, 1882 Section 58
Title: Grantor's duty not to render property unsafe
State: Central
Year: 1882
The grantor of a licence is bound not to do anything likely to render the property affected by the licence dangerous to the person or property of the licensee.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionThe Delhi Apartment Ownership Act, 1986 Complete Act
State: Delhi
Year: 1986
.....document which ascertains the rights and liabilities of the parties to the deed. Failure to comply with the terms of the agreement shall attract legal action by the aggrieved party. 8. Right of re-entry (1) Where any land is given on lease by a person (hereafter in this section referred to as the lessor) to another person (hereafter in this section referred to as the lessee, which term shall include a person in whose favour a sub-lease of such land has been granted), and any multistoreyed building has been constructed on such lease-hold land by the lessee or by any other person authorized by him or claiming through him, such lessee shall grant in respect of the land as many sub-leases s there are apartments in such multi-storeyed building and shall execute separate deeds of sub-lease in respect of such land in favour of each apartment owner.- (a) in the case of multi-storeyed building constructed before the commencement of this Act, within three months from such commencement; or (b) in the case of a multi-storeyed building constructed after the commencement of this Act, within three months from the date on which the possession of any apartment in such.....
List Judgments citing this sectionIndian Easements Act, 1882 Chapter 6
Title: Licenses
State: Central
Year: 1882
.....licence is granted for a specified purpose and the purpose is attained or abandoned, or becomes impracticable; (g) where the licence is granted to the licensee as holding a particular office, employment or character, and such office,employment or character ceases to exist; (h) where the licence totally ceases to be used as such for an unbroken period of twenty years, and such cessation is not inpursuance of a contract between the grantor and the licensee; (i) in the case of an accessory licence, when Ihe interest or right to which it is accessory to exist. Section 63 - Licensee's rights on revocation Where a licence is revoked, the licensee is entitled to a reasonable time to leave the property affected thereby and to remove any goods which he has been allowed to place on such property. Section 64 - Licensee's rights on eviction Where a licence has been granted for a consideration, and the licensee, without any fault of his own, is evicted by the grantor before he has fully enjoyed, under the licence, the right for which he contracted, he is entitled to recover compensation from the grantor.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionThe Easements Act, 1882 Complete Act
State: Central
Year: 1882
.....appears, be deemed to pass the easement to the person in whose favour the transfer or devolution takes place. SECTION 20: RULES CONTROLLED BY CONTRACT OR TITLE The rules contained in this Chapter are controlled by any contract between the dominant and servient owners relating to the servient heritage, and by the provisions of the instrument or decree, if any, by which the easement referred to was imposed. Incidents of customary easements and when any incident of any customary easement is inconsistent with such rules, nothing in this Chapter shall affect such incident. SECTION 21: BAR TO USE UNCONNECTED WITH ENJOYMENT An easement must not be used for any purpose not connected with the enjoyment of the dominant heritage. SECTION 22: EXERCISE OF EASEMENT -- CONFINEMENT OF EXERCISE OF Easement The dominant owner must exercise his right in the mode which is least onerous to the servient owner; and when the exercise of an easement can without detriment to the dominant owner be confined to a determinate part of the servient heritage, such exercise shall, at the request of the servient owner, be so confined. SECTION 23: RIGHT TO ALTER MODE OF ENJOYMENT Subject to the provisions of.....
List Judgments citing this sectionEstate Duty Act, 1953 [Repealed] Section 26
Title: Property Passing by Reason of a Bona Fide Purchase for Full or Partial Consideration in Money
State: Central
Year: 1953
(1) Subject to the provisions of section 27 and section 46 estate duty shall not be payable in respect of property passing on the death of the deceased by reason only of bona fide purchase from the person under whose disposition the property passes, nor in nor in respect of the determination of any annuity for lives, where such purchase was made, or such lease or annuity granted, for full consideration in money or money's worth paid to the vendor or grantor for his own use or benefit, or in the case of a lease from the use or benefit of any person from whom the grantor was a trustee. (2) Where any such purchase was made, or lease or annuity granted for partial consideration in money or money's worth paid to the vendor or grantor for his own use or benefit, or in the case of a lease for the use or benefit of any person for whom the grantor was a trustee, the value of the consideration shall be allowed as a deduction from the value of the property for the purpose of estate duty.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionEstate Duty Act, 1953 Complete Act
State: Central
Year: 1953
.....in the Wealth-tax Act and the rules made thereunder. 4. Another amendment seeks to make a provision similar to that contained in Income-tax Act, 1961 and Wealth-tax Act, 1957, to secure that where the deceased was a member of a co-operative housing Society the value of one house or part thereof allotted or leased to him under a house-building scheme of the society would be treated as a house owned by the deceased, thus qualifying for the concessional treatment accorded to residential house property. 5. The other amendments proposed in the Bill are of a consequential nature. 6. The amendments are being made with retrospective effect from the 1st day of March, 1981 and accordingly the proposed concessions will also be available in relation to estate duty in the case of persons who have died after the 28th February, 1981. 7. The Bill seeks to achieve the above objects. -Gaz. of Ind., 13-7-82, Pt. II, S. 2,Ext" p. 8 (No. 28) Act 53 of 1984 This Bill seeks to amend the Estate Duty Act, 1953, mainly with a view to excluding agricultural lands from the levy of estate duty. 2. One of the amendments proposed accordingly seeks to provide that the Act shall cease to apply to the.....
List Judgments citing this sectionIndian Easements Act, 1882 Section 62
Title: License when Deemed Revoked
State: Central
Year: 1882
.....(d) where the property affected by the licence is destroyed or by superior force so permanently altered that the licensee can nolonger exercise his right; (e) where the licensee becomes entitled to the absolute ownership of the property affected by the licence; (f) where the licence is granted for a specified purpose and the purpose is attained or abandoned, or becomes impracticable; (g) where the licence is granted to the licensee as holding a particular office, employment or character, and such office,employment or character ceases to exist; (h) where the licence totally ceases to be used as such for an unbroken period of twenty years, and such cessation is not inpursuance of a contract between the grantor and the licensee; (i) in the case of an accessory licence, when Ihe interest or right to which it is accessory to exist.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionIndian Easements Act, 1882 Complete Act
Title: Indian Easements Act, 1882
State: Central
Year: 1882
.....which cannot be acquired by prescription Section18 - Customary easements Section19 - Transfer of dominant heritage passes easement Chapter 3 Section20 - Rules controlled by contract or title Section21 - Bar to use unconnected with enjoyment Section22 - Exercise of easement. Confinement of exercise of easement Section23 - Right to alter mode of enjoyment Section24 - Right to do acts to secure enjoyment Section25 - Liability for expenses necessary for preservation of easements Section26 - Liability for damage from want of repair Section27 - Servient owner not bound to do anything Section28 - Extent of easements Section29 - Increase of easement Section30 - Partition of dominant heritage Section31 - Obstruction in case of excessive user Chapter 4 Section32 - Right to enjoyment without disturbance Section33 - Suit for disturbance of easement Section34 - When cause of action arises for removal of support Section35 - Injunction to restrain disturbance Section36 - Abatement of obstruction of easement Chapter 5 Section37 - Extinction by dissolution of right of servient owner Section38 - Extinction by release Section39 - Extinction by revocation Section40 -.....
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