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Admitted - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Notice of admit

Notice of admit. The parties to a suit may, by their solicitors, agree to admit at the trial documents and facts; and such agreement often saves trouble and expense, where there is no ground for disputing them.'Either party may call on the other by notice of admit any document saving all just exceptions, and in case of refusal, or neglect to admit, the costs of proving the document shall be paid by the party neglecting or refusing, whatever the result of the cause may be, unless at the hearing or trial the judge shall certify that the refusal was reasonable; and no costs of proving any document are allowed unless notice be given, except where the omission to give the notice is a saving of expense' (R.S.C., Ord. XXXII., r. 2). This rule is frequently acted upon. There is another (rule 4), providing for a notice to admit facts first introduced in 1883, and not so much used....


Tax admitted

Tax admitted, the expression 'tax admitted' in the proviso to s. 9(1) of the U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948 means that admitted in the memorandum of appeal, s. 9 can be made wholly useless. All that an assessee has to do is not to admit his liability in the memorandum of appeal, whatever his stand might have been before the assessing authority. Ordinarily no interpretation should be placed on a provision which would have the effect of making the provision either otios or a dead letter. Further, to find out the true meaning of the expression 'tax admitted' one must take into consideration the remaining words of the proviso namely 'or such instalments thereof as may become payable'. Those words furnish a key to the interpretation. If one of the conditions for maintainability of the appeal is payment of the instalments which have become payable under r. 41(2), it means that the admission that has got to be taken into consideration is that made before the assessing authority and not before the a...


Makes any order admitting any instrument in evidence

Makes any order admitting any instrument in evidence, the order is an order about the sufficiency or insufficiency of the stamp with reference to a document which has been admitted in evidence. No formal or specific order admitting the document in evidence, H.H. Sir Syed Raza Ali Khan v. Dr. Saran Behari Mathur, AIR 1960 All 359....


admit

admit ad·mit·ted ad·mit·ting vt 1 : to concede as true or valid : make an admission of 2 : to allow to be entered or offered [admitted the document into evidence] [ a will to probate] vi : to make acknowledgment used with to [s to the murder] ...


admitted asset

admitted asset see asset ...


request to admit

request to admit :request for admission ...


Admitted

Admitted, means not admission of person whose signature is disputed in legal proceedings but it must be admission of person who claims that disputed signature was written by person by whom it purports to have been written and such person will signify to court that he has no objection if those sample signatures are compared with original one, Sunil Chowdhury v. Arup Kumar Ghosh, AIR 2006 Cal 109. [s. 73 and illustration (c) to s. 45 of Evidence Act, 1872]...


Tax admittedly payable

Tax admittedly payable, the expression 'Tax ad-mittedly payable' means the tax which is payable' inter alia according to the return filed by the dealer, C.S.T. v. Qureshi Cruchble Centre, AIR 1994 SC 25 (26). [Uttar Pradesh Sales Tax Act (15 of 1948), s. 8]...


Bail

Bail [fr. bailler, Fr., to hand over], to set at liberty a person arrested or imprisoned, on security being taken for his appearance on a day and at a place certain, which security is called bail, because the party arrested or imprisoned is delivered into the hands of those who bind themselves or become bail for his due appearance when required, in order that he may be safely protected from prison, to which they have, if they fear his escape, etc., the legal power to deliver him.Means a security such as cash or a bond, especially security required by court for the release of a prisoner who must appear at a further time, Black Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 135.Bail, a temporary release of a prisoner in exchange for security given for the prisoner's appearance at a later hearing, Webster's Dictionary of Law, Indian Edn., (2005), p. 41.Bail may be given either in civil or criminal cases.In civil cases there were, before the abolition of arrest on mesne process by the Debtors Act, 1869:-(1)...


request for admission

request for admission :a written request served upon another party to an action (as under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 36) asking that the party admit the truth of certain matters relevant to the action called also request for admissions request to admit NOTE: A party upon whom a request for admission has been served must provide an answer for each matter of which an admission is requested by admitting it, denying it, or giving reasons why it can be neither admitted nor denied. A matter admitted does not have to be proven at trial, but it is established for the purpose of the pending action only. ...


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