O Dictionary
Order in Council
Order in Council, an order made by the Sovereign 'by and with the advice of His Majesty's Privy Council.' Such orders are now largely used for the purpose of completing the Administrative part of Acts of Parliament. The Government of the day is responsible for them, and they are usually issued in a complete form from the administrative department concerned, the authorization by the Privy Council being a mere formality. As pointed out by Lord Parker in The Zamora (1916) 2 AC 90, neither the King in Council nor any branch of the Executive has power to prescribe or alter the law by Order in Council, save when expressly authorized by statute. See STATUTORY RULES....
Order of Course
Order of Course, an order made on an ex parte application, and to which a party is entitled a of right on his own statement and at his own risk (R.S.C. 1883, App. N,, No. 195)....
Order of Discharge
Order of Discharge, an order made under the Bankruptcy Act 1914, s. 26, by a Court of bankruptcy, the effect of which is to discharge a bankrupt from all debts, claims, or demands provable under the bankruptcy, except Crown debts, debts incurred by fraud, and certain judgments (s. 28)....
Order of Revivor
Order of Revivor, an order as of course for an order as of course for the continuance of an abated suit. It superseded the bill of revivor. See 15 & 16 Vict. c. 86, s. 52, and Cons. Ord. 1860, XXXII., r. 1, and title ABATEMENT....
order paper
order paper see paper ...
order to show cause
order to show cause see order ...
Order XIV
Order XIV. See LEAVE TO DEFEND....
Order-on-default
Order-on-default, an order for release on bail under proviso (a) of s. 167(2) of the Code read with s. 20(4) of TADA is generally termed as an 'order-on-default' as it is granted on account of the default of the prosecution to complete the investigation and file the challan within the prescribed period, Hitendra Vishnu Thakur v. State of Maharashtra, (1994) 4 SCC 602: AIR 1994 SC 2623 (2636)....
Other
Either used with other or or for its correlative as either or are now used...
Other
Other, in a charter-party, it was provided that the owners were liable to pay for 'port charges, pilotages, and other expenses at those ports'. The expression 'other expenses' must be construed ejusdem generis; so that the owners did not have to pay for coals which the charters by a previous clause have undertaken to provide and pay for, The Durham City, 58 LT 46.Other, must mean 'some other person' than the trustee deceased or going abroad or retiring or refusing or becoming incapable to act and also other than a trustee making appointment, that is to say, other than the appointer himself because the general practice of the conveyances, the understanding of lawyers and the purposes of deeds like this are against the notion of executor or administrator of the last acting trustee of appointing himself, Skeats v. Evans, (1889) 42 Ch D 522....