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Provincial Small Cause Courts Act, 1887 Section 19

Title: Admission, Return and Rejection of Plaints by Registrar

State: Central

Year: 1887

(1) When the Judge of a Court of Small Causes is absent, and an Additional Judge has not been appointed or, having been appointed, is also absent, the Registrar may admit a plaint, or return or reject a plaint for any reason for which the Judge might return or reject it. (2) The Judge may, of his own motion or on the application of a party, return or reject a plaint which has been admitted by the Registrar, or admit a plaint which has been returned or rejected by him: Provided that where a party applies for the return or rejection or the admission of a plaint under this sub-section, and his application is not made at the first sitting of the Judge after the day on which the Registrar admitted, or returned or rejected, the plaint, the Judge shall dismiss the application unless the applicant satisfies him that there was sufficient cause for not making the application at that sitting.

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Small Cause Courts Act, 1964 Section 12

Title: Admission, Return and Rejection of Plaints by Registrar

State: Karnataka

Year: 1964

(1) When the Judge is absent and an Additional Judge has not been appointed or, having been appointed, is also absent, the Registrar, may admit a plaint, or return or reject a plaint for any reason for which the Judge might return or reject it. (2) The Judge may, of his own motion or on the application of a party, return or reject a plaint which has been admitted by the Registrar, or admit a plaint which has been returned or rejected by him: Provided that, where a party applies for the return or rejection or the admission of a plaint under this sub-section, and his application is not made at the first sitting of the Judge, after the day on which the Registrar admitted, or returned or rejected the plaint, the Judge shall dismiss the application unless the applicant satisfies him that there was sufficient cause for not making the application at that sitting.

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Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 Section 121

Title: Power to Reject Sureties

State: Central

Year: 1973

.....before holding the inquiry, give reasonable notice to the surety and to the person by whom the surety was offered and shall, in making the inquiry, record the substance of the evidence adduced before him. (3) If the Magistrate is satisfied, after considering the evidence so adduced either before him or before, a Magistrate deputed under sub-section (1), and the report of such Magistrate (if any), that the surety is an unfit person for the purposes of the bond, he shall make an order refusing to accept or rejecting, as the case may be, such surety and recording his reasons for so doing: Provided that, before making an order rejecting any surety who has previously been accepted, the Magistrate shall issue his summons or warrant, as he thinks fit, and cause the person for whom the surety is bound to appear or to be brought before him.

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Inchek Tyres Limited and National Rubber Manufacturers Limited Nationalisation Act, 1984 Section 21

Title: Admission or Rejection of Claims

State: Central

Year: 1984

.....on affidavits; (d) the issuing of any commission for the examination of witnesses. (6) Any investigation before the Commissioner shall be deemed to be a judicial proceeding within the meaning of sections 193 and 228 of the Indian Penal Code and the Commissioner shall be deemed to be a civil court for the purposes of section 195 and Chapter XXVI of the Code of Criminal Procedure, (7) A claimant who is dissatisfied with the decision of the Commissioner may prefer an appeal against such decision to the principal civil Court of original jurisdiction within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the registered office of the concerned company is situated: Provided that where a person who is a Judge of a High Court is appointed to be the Commissioner, such appeal, shall lie to the High Court exercising jurisdiction over the place in which the registered office of the concerned company is situated and such appeal shall be heard and disposed of by not less than two Judges of that High Court.

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Indian Evidence Act 1872 Chapter 11

Title: Of Improper Admission and Rejection of Evidence

State: Central

Year: 1872

The improper admission or rejection of evidence shall not be ground of itself for anew trial or reversal of any decision in any case, if it shall appear to the Court before which such objection is raised that, independently of the evidence objected to and admitted, there was sufficient evidence to justify the decision, or that, if the rejected evidence had been received it ought not to have varied the decision.

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Indian Evidence Act 1872 Section 167

Title: No New Trial for Improper Admission or Rejection of Evidence

State: Central

Year: 1872

The improper admission or rejection of evidence shall not be ground of itself for anew trial or reversal of any decision in any case, if it shall appear to the Court before which such objection is raised that, independently of the evidence objected to and admitted, there was sufficient evidence to justify the decision, or that, if the rejected evidence had been received it ought not to have varied the decision.

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Standards of Weights and Measures Enforcement Act, 1985 (54 of 1985) Section 54

Title: Penalty for Selling or Delivering Rejected Weights and Measures

State: Central

Year: 1985

Whoever sells, delivers or disposes of, or causes to be sold, delivered or disposed of, and weight or measure which has been rejected on verification under this Act or the Standards Act, or any rule made under either of the said Act, shall be punished with imprisonment for a term which may extend to one year, or with fine which may extend to two thousand rupees, or with both: Provided that nothing in this section shall apply to the sale, as scrap, or any rejected weight or measure which has been defaced in the prescribed manner.

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Information Technology Act, 2000 Section 24

Title: Procedure for Grant or Rejection of Licence

State: Central

Year: 2000

The Controller may, on receipt of an application under sub-section (1) of section 21, after considering the documents accompanying the application and such other factors, as he deems fit, grant the licence or reject the application: Provided that no application shall be rejected under this section unless the applicant has been given a reasonable opportunity of presenting his case.

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Waste Lands (Claims) Act, 1863 Section 3

Title: Postponement of Sale Pending Enquiry, to Allow Claimant to Contest Rejection of Claim

State: Central

Year: 1863

Pending an enquiry into any claim or objection under the date last preceding section, the Collector or other officer as aforesaid shall postpone the sale or other disposition of the land; and, if he shall order that such claim or objection be rejected, he of shall further postpone the sale or other disposition of the land, to allow the claimant or objector to contest the order of rejection in the manner hereinafter provided.

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Indian Succession Act, 1925 Section 78

Title: Rejection of Erroneous Particulars in Description of Subject

State: Central

Year: 1925

If the thing which the testator intended to bequeath can be sufficiently identified from the description of it given in the Will, but some parts of the description do not apply, such parts of the description shall be rejected as erroneous, and the bequest shall take effect. Illustrations (i) A bequeaths to B "my marsh-lands lying in L and in the occupation of X". The testator had marsh-lands lying in L, but had no marsh-lands in the occupation of X. The words "in the occupation of X" shall be rejected as erroneous, and the marsh-lands of the testator lying in L Will pass by the bequest. (ii) The testator bequeaths to A "my zamindari of Rampur". He had an estate at Rampur but it was a taluq and not a zamindari. The taluq passes by this bequest.

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