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Start Free TrialCalcutta Police Act, 1866 Complete Act
State: West Bengal
Year: 1866
.....entering or remaining in or on building, land, vehicle, etc 3838. Sec. 29 subs. for the original Sec. by Ben. Act 3 of 1910. Whoever without satisfactory excuse, wilfully enters or remains in or upon any dwelling-house or private premises or any land or ground attached thereto, or any ground, building, monument or structure belonging to 3939. Subs. by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937 and the Adaptation of Laws Order, 1950. [Government] or appropriated to public purposes, or any vehicle, boat or vessel, shall, whether he cause, any actual damage or not, be liable to fine which may extend to twenty rupees. Section 30 Order of maintenance for wife or child; restoration of woman or child detained for unlawful purpose Rep. by Act 4 of 1877. Section 31 Order of maintenance for wife or child; restoration of woman or child detained for unlawful purpose Rep. by Act 4 of 1877. Section 32 Apprehension and punishment of reputed thieves, etc Any person found between sunset and sunrise armed with any dangerous or offensive instrument whatsoever, with intent to commit any criminal act; any reputed thief found between sunset and sunrise on board any vessel.....
List Judgments citing this sectionCentral Excise Tariff (Amendment) Act, 2004 Chapter XL
Title: Rubber and Articles Thereof
State: Central
Year: 2004
.....products, whether or not vulcanised or hard: natural rubber, balata, gutta-percha, guayule, chicle and similar natural gums, synthetic rubber, factice derived from oils, and such substances reclaimed. 2. This Chapter does not cover: (a) goods of Section XI (textiles and textile articles); (b) footwear or parts thereof of Chapter 64; (c) headgear or parts thereof (including bathing caps) of Chapter 65; (d) mechanical or electrical appliances or parts thereof of Section XVI (including electrical goods of all kinds), of hard rubber; (e) articles of Chapter 90,92,94 or 96; or (f) articles of Chapter 95 (other than sports gloves, mittens and mitts and articles of headings 4011 to 4013). 3. In headings 4001 to 4003 and 4005, the expression "primary forms" applies only to the following forms: (a) liquids and pastes (including latex, whether or not pre-vulcanised, and other dispersions and solutions); (b) blocks of irregular shape, lumps, bales, powders, granules, crumbs and similar bulk forms. 4. In Note 1 to this Chapter and in heading 4002, the expression "synthetic rubber" applies to: (a) unsaturated synthetic substances which can be irreversibly.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionCustoms Tariff Act 1975 Chapter 40
Title: Rubber and Articles Thereof
State: Central
Year: 1975
.....products, whether or not vulcanised or hard: natural rubber, balata, gutta-percha, guayule, chicle and similar natural gums, synthetic rubber, factice derived from oils, and such substances reclaimed. 2. This Chapter does not cover: (a) Goods of Section XI (textiles and textile articles); (b) Footwear or parts thereof of Chapter 64; (c) Headgear or parts thereof (including bathing caps) of Chapter 65; (d) Mechanical or electrical appliances or parts thereof of Section XVI (including electrical goods of all kinds), of hard rubber; (e) Articles of Chapter 90, 92, 94 or 96; or (f) Articles of Chapter 95 (other than sports gloves, mittens and mitts and articles of headings 4011 to 4013). 3. In headings 4001 to 4003 and 4005, the expression "primary forms" applies only to the following forms: (a) Liquids and pastes (including latex, whether or not pre-vulcanised, and other dispersions and solutions); (b) Blocks of irregular shape, lumps, bales, powders, granules, crumbs and similar bulk forms. 4. In Note 1 to this Chapter and in heading 4002, the expression "synthetic rubber" applies to: (a) Unsaturated synthetic substances which can be irreversibly.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionKarnataka Agricultural Produce Marketing (Regulation) Act, 1966 Schedule I
Title: First Schedule
State: Karnataka
Year: 1966
.....257 MMD 86 dt. 4.12.1986 and Inserted by Notification NO. CMW 104 MRE 94 dt. 9.1.1995 2. Inserted by Notification No. CMW 257 MMD 86 dt. 4.12.1986 3. Inserted by Notification No. CMW 233 MRE 94 dt. 21.3.1996 4. Deleted by Notification No. CMW 272 MMD 86 dt. 14.1.1987 5. Inserted by Notification No. CMW 183 MRE 88 dt. 2.6.1989 6. Inserted by Notification No. CMW 96 MRE 94 dt.9.11.1994 7. Items 22 to 86 Inserted by Notification No. CMW 95 MRE 89 dt. 29.11.1989 8. Deleted by Notification No. CMW 258 MMD 86 dt. 7.1.1988 9. Inserted by Notification No. CMW 48 MRE 96 dt. 4.10.1996 10. Schedule inserted by Act 17 of 1980 w.e.f. 30.6.1979 11. Inserted by Notification No. CMW 76 MRE 89 dt. 9.5.1991
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionSpecial Rules for the Multistoreyed and Public Buildings, 1974 Complete Act
State: Tamil Nadu
Year: 1974
.....or open space for amenity requirement prescribed under these rules. (d) Every such means of access shall be made drained and lighted to the satisfaction of the Commissioner and manhole covers or other drainage, water-supply or any other fittings laid in such means of access shall be flush with the finished surface level so as not to obstruct the travel over the same. (e) Any person who undertakes any construction, reconstruction addition or alteration to any building shall not reduce the access to any building previously existing below the minimum width prescribed under these rules. (2) (a) Every building meant for human occupation shall be provided with exits sufficient to permit safe escape of occupants in case of fire or other emergency. (b) An exit may be a doorway, corridor, passageway to an internal staircase or external staircase or to a varandah or roofs or terrace having access to the street or a staircase. EXPLANATION."Lifts and escalators shall not be considered as exits. (c) Exits shall be arranged as to provide continuous means of egress to the exterior of a building or an exterior open space leading to a street, without passing through any occupied unit. (d).....
List Judgments citing this sectionWater (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974 Complete Act
State: Central
Year: 1974
.....constituted under section 3-;] (c) "member" means a member of a Board and includes the chairman thereof; 3 [(d) "occupier", in relation to any factory or premises, means the person who has control over the affairs of the factory or the premises, and includes, in relation to any substance, the person in possession of the substance;] 4 (dd) "outlet" includes any conduit pipe or channel, open or closed, carrying sewage or trade effluent or any other holding arrangement which causes, or is likely to cause, pollution;] (e) "pollution" means such contamination of water or such alteration of the physical, chemical or biological properties of water or such discharge of any sewage or trade effluent or of any other liquid, gaseous or solid substance into water (whether directly or indirectly) as may, or is likely to, create a nuisance or render such water harmful or injurious to public health or safety, or to domestic, commercial, industrial, agricultural or other legitimate uses, or to the life and health of animals or plants or of acquatic organisms; (f) "prescribed" means prescribed by rules made under this Act by the Central Government or, as the case may be, the State.....
List Judgments citing this sectionCalcutta Suburban Police Act, 1866 Complete Act
State: West Bengal
Year: 1866
.....Wrongfully entering or remaining in or on building, land, vehicle, etc 2828. Secs. 15A and 15B ins. by Ben. Act 3 of 1910. Whoever, without satisfactory excuse, wilfully enters or remains in or upon any dwelling-house or private premises or any land or ground attached thereto, or any ground,building, monument or structure belonging to the 2727. Words subs. by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937 and the Adaptation of Laws Order, 1950, respectively. [Government] or appropriated to public purposes, or any vehicle, boat or vessel, shall, whether he causes any actual damage or not, be liable to fine which may extend to twenty rupees. Section 16 Apprehension and punishment of reputed thieves, etc A Police-officer may arrest without a warrant any person found, between sunest and sunrise, armed with any dangerous or offensive instrument whatsoever, with intent to commit any offence against the person or property of another; any reputed thief found between sunset and sunrise, on board any vessel or boat, or lying or loitering in any bazar, street, * * yard, thoroughfare or other place, who shall not give a satisfactory account of himself; any person.....
List Judgments citing this sectionHowrah Offences Act, 1857 Complete Act
State: West Bengal
Year: 1857
.....such Magistrate to the punishment hereinafter prescribed for the offence. Section 2 Possession of stolen property by one who fails to account satisfactorily for the possession. Power to summon persons declared to have had possession of stolen property within the jurisdiction of the Magistrate. Penalty if such possession fraudulent Clause 1. Whoever has in his possession, or conveys in any manner, anything which may be reasonably suspected of being stolen or fraudulently obtained, shall, if he fail to account satisfactorily how he came by the same, be liable to a penalty not exceeding one hundred rupees, or to imprisonment, with or without hard labour, for any term not exceeding three months. Clause 2. If any person, charged with having or conveying anything stolen or fraudulently obtained, shall declare that he received the same from some other person, or that he was employed as a carrier, agent or servant to convey the same for some other person, the Magistrate may cause every such other person, and also, if necessary, every former or pretended purchaser or other person through whose possession the same shall have passed (provided that such other person shall be alleged to.....
List Judgments citing this sectionCustoms Tariff Act 1975 Chapter 84
Title: Nuclear Reactors, Boilers, Machinery and Mechanical Appliances; Parts Thereof
State: Central
Year: 1975
.....covers photosensitive semiconductor devices and light emitting diodes. (B) For the purposes of this Note and heading 8486, the expression "manufacture of flat panel displays" covers the fabrication of substrates into a flat panel. It does not cover the manufacture of glass or the assembly of printed circuit boards or other electronic components onto the flat panel. The expression "flat panel display" does not cover cathode--ray tube technology. (C) Heading 8486 also includes machines and apparatus solely or principally of a kind used for: (i) the manufacture or repair of masks and reticles; (ii) assembling semiconductor devices or electronic integrated circuits; and; (iii) lifting, handling, loading or unloading of boules, wafers, semiconductor devices, electronic integrated circuits and flat panel displays. (D) Subject to Note 1 to Section XVI and Note 1 to Chapter 84, machines and apparatus answering to the description in heading 8486 are to be classified in that heading and in no other heading of this schedule] SUB-HEADING NOTES 1. For the purposes of subheading 8471 49, the term "systems" means automatic data processing machines whose units satisfy the.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionThe Sikkim Prisons Act, 2007 Complete Act
State: Sikkim
Year: 2007
.....other records as the Government may, by rule direct, and the Jailer shall make an entry in its proper place stating in respect of each direction the fact of its having been or not having complied with, accompanied by such observations, as the Jailer thinks fit to make with the date & time of the entry. CHAPTER IX VISITS TO PRISONERS Visits to civil and under-trial /convicted prisoners. 37 . Due provision shall be made for the admission, at proper times and under proper restrictions, into every prison of persons with whom civil or un-convicted criminal / convicted prisoners may desire to communicate, care being taken that so far as may be consistent with the interests of justice, prisoners under trial may see their duly qualified legal advisers without the presence of any other person. Search of visitor. 38 . (1) The Jailer may demand the name and address of any visitor to a prisoner, and, when the Jailer has any ground for suspicion, may search any visitor, or cause to be searched, but the search shall not be made in the presence of any prisoner or of another visitor. (2) In case of any such visitor refusing to permit himself to be searched, the Jailer may deny.....
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