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Home Bare Acts Phrase: section 28 Sorted by: old Page 1 of about 580 results (0.004 seconds)Government of India Act, 1833 [Repealed] Section 28
Title: [Repealed]
State: Central
Year: 1833
Repealed 37&38Vict., c. 35(S.L.R.).
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionBengal Bonded Warehouse Association Act, 1838 Section 28
Title: Certificates of Deposit, Transferable by Endorsement
State: Central
Year: 1838
1 * * * As often as any Goods are lodged in any Warehouse of the said Association, the Secretary of the said Association shall deliver a warrant signed by him as such Secretary, to the person lodging such Goods, which warrant shall be, as nearly as possible, in the form set forth in Schedule II annexed to this Act, and such warrant shall be transferable by indorsement, and shall entitle any person to whom it may have been so transferred by endorsement, to receive the Goods specified in such warrant on the same terms on which the person who originally lodged those Goods would have been entitled to receive the same. _________________________ 1. The words "And it is hereby enacted, that" omitted by Act 12 of 1891, section 2 and Schedule I.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionGovernment of India Act, 1858 [Repealed] Section 28
Title: As to Communication of Secret Despatches from India
State: Central
Year: 1858
Any Despatches to Great Britain which might if this Act had not been passed have been addressed to the Secret Committee of the Court of Directors, may be marked, 'Secret' by the Authorities sending the same and such Despatches shall not be communicated to the Members of the Council, unless the Secretary of State shall so think fit and direct.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionIndian Penal Code (45 of 1860) Section 28
Title: "counterfeit"
State: Central
Year: 1860
A person is said to "counterfeit" who causes one thing to resemble another thing, intending by means of that resemblance to practise deception, or knowing it to be likely that deception will thereby be practised. 1[Explanation 1.--It is not essential to counterfeiting that the imitation should be exact. Explanation 2.--When a person causes one thing to resemble another thing, and the resemblance is such that a person might be deceived thereby, it shall be presumed, until the contrary is proved, that the person so causing the one thing to resemble the other thing intended by means of that resemblance to practise deception or knew it to be likely that deception would thereby be practised.] ___________________ 1. Substituted by Act 1 of 1889, section 9, for the original Explanation.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionPolice Act, 1861 Section 28
Title: Persons Refusing to Deliver Up Certificate ,etc., on Ceasing to Be Police-officers
State: Central
Year: 1861
Every person, having ceased to be an enrolled police-officerunder this Act, who shall not forthwith deliver up his certificate, and theclothing, accoutrements, appointments and other necessaries which shall havebeen supplied to him for the execution of his duty, shall be liable, onconviction before a Magistrate, to a penalty not exceed-being two hundred rupees, or to imprisonment with or without hard labour, for aperiod not exceeding six months, or to both.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionCONVERTS' MARRIAGE DISSOLUTION ACT, 1866 Section 28
Title: Power to Court to award alimony
State: Central
Year: 1866
If a suit be commenced under the provisions of this Act, and it appear to the Court that the wife has not sufficient separate property to enable her to maintain herself suitably to her station in life and to prosecute or defend the suit, the Court may, pending the suit order the husband to furnish the wife with sufficient funds to enable her to prosecute or defend the suit, and also for her maintenance pending the suit. If the suit be brought by a husband against a wife, the Court may by the decree order the husband to make such allowance to his wife for her maintenance during the remainder of her life as the Court shall think just, and having regard to the condition and station in life of the parties. Any allowance so ordered shall cease from the time of any subsequent marriage of the wife.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionBombay Civil Courts Act, 1869 Section 28
Title: Power to Invest Civil Judges with Small Cause Powers
State: Central
Year: 1869
.....appeals from appellate decrees.] _________________________ 1. Substituted for the words "one thousand and five hundred rupees" by the Maharashtra Civil Courts (Enhancement of Pecuniary Jurisdiction and Amendment) Act (46 of 1977), Section 15(a) (1-1-1978). 2. Substituted for the words "five hundred rupees" where they occur for the second time by the Maharashtra Civil Courts (Enhancement of Pecuniary Jurisdiction and Amendment) Act (46 of 1977), Section 15(b) 3. Substituted for the words "twenty-five thousand rupees" by the Bombay Civil Courts (Amdt.) Act, 1982, (10 of 1983), Section 4(1-1-1984). 4. Substituted for the original section by Bom. Act 94 of 1958, S. 7 (1-4-1959).
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionDivorce Act, 1869 Section 28
Title: Court May Grant Protection-order
State: Central
Year: 1869
The Court, if satisfied of the fact of such desertion, and that the same was without reasonable excuse, and that the wife is maintaining herself by her own industry or property, may make and give to the wife an order protecting her earnings and other property from her husband and all creditors and persons claiming under him. Every such order shall state the time at which the desertion commenced, and shall, as regards all persons dealing with the wife in reliance thereon, be conclusive as to such time.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionBombay Civil Courts Act, 1869, (Maharashtra) Section 28
Title: Power to Invest Civil Judges with Small Cause Powers
State: Maharashtra
Year: 1869
.....exceeding in the case of a Civil Judge (Senior Division)2[twelve thousand rupees] and in the case of a Civil Judge (Junior Division)3[six thousand rupees]. (2) A Civil Judges (Senior Division) or a Civil Judge (Junior Division), who is invested with the jurisdiction of a Court of Small Causes under sub-section (1), shall continue to have such jurisdiction within the local limits of his ordinary jurisdiction so long and as often as he may fill the office of Civil Judge (Senior Division) or Civil Judge (Junior Division), as the case may be, without reference to the District in which he may be employed. (3) The High Court may, whenever it thinks fit, withdraw such jurisdiction from any Civil Judge so invested.] ______________________ 1. This section was substituted for the original by Bom. 94 of 1958, s. 7. 2. These words were substituted for the words "three thousand rupees" by Mah. 35 of 2001, s. 2(a). 3. These words were substituted for the words "one thousand and five hundred rupees", by Mah. 35 of 2001, s. 2(b).
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionCourt-fees Act, 1870 Section 28
Title: Stamping Documents Inadvertently Received
State: Central
Year: 1870
No document which ought to bear a stamp under this Act shall be of any validity, unless and until it is properly stamped. But, if any such document is through mistake or inadvertence received, filed or used in any Court or office without being properly stamped, the presiding Judge or the head of the office, as the case may be, or, in the case of a High Court, any Judge of such Court, may, if he thinks fit, order that such document be stamped as he may direct; and, on such document being stamped accordingly, the same and every proceeding relative thereto shall be as valid as if it had been properly stamped in the first instance.
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