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Aggrieved Party - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: aggrieved party

Any aggrieved party

Any aggrieved party, the expression employed in s. 20(1) of the Kerala Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1965 means a person feeling aggrieved by the ultimate decision, that is, the operative part of the order. A party to the proceedings, who has succeeded in securing the relief prayed for, is not a party aggrieved though the order contains a finding or two adverse to him, Nalakath Sainuddin v. Koorikadan Sulaiman, (2002) 6 SCC 1 (12): AIR 2002 SC 2562....


aggrieved party

aggrieved party see party ...


party aggrieved

party aggrieved see party ...


party

party pl: parties 1 a : one (as a person, group, or entity) constituting alone or with others one of the sides of a proceeding, transaction, or agreement [the parties to a contract] [a person who signed the instrument as a to the instrument "Uniform Commercial Code"] accommodated party : a party to an instrument for whose benefit an accommodation party signs and incurs liability on the instrument : a party for whose benefit an accommodation is made accommodation party : a party who signs and thereby incurs liability on an instrument that is issued for value and given for the benefit of an accommodated party secured party : a party holding a security interest in another's property third party : a person other than the principals [insurance against injury to a third party] b : one (as an individual, firm, or corporation) that constitutes the plaintiff or defendant in an action ;also : one so involved in the prosecution or defense of a judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding as t...


Party aggrieved

Party aggrieved, a person not directly affected cannot be so considered as 'Party aggrieved', Gopabandhu Biswal v. Krishna Chandra, (1998) 4 SCC 447. (CPC, 1908, Order 47, Rule 1)...


aggrieved person

aggrieved person : aggrieved party at party ...


restitution

restitution 1 a : a restoration of something to its rightful owner b : a making good of or giving an equivalent for some injury 2 a : the equitable remedy of restoring to an aggrieved party that which was obtained in unjust enrichment b : a remedy for breach of contract that consists of restoring the aggrieved party to the status quo that existed before the contract was made 3 : an amount to be paid for the purpose of restitution [ordered to pay to the victim of his crime] compare fine res·ti·tu·tion·al [res-tə-tü-shə-nəl, -tyü-] adj res·ti·tu·tion·ary [res-tə-tü-shə-ner-ē, -tyü-] adj res·ti·tu·tive [res-tə-tü-tiv, -tyü-] adj res·ti·tu·to·ry [res-tə-tü-tə-rē, -tyü-; rə-sti-tyə-tōr-ē] adj ...


Husband and wife

Husband and wife. the Common Law treated them, for most purposes, as one person, giving, with exceptions comparatively unimportant, the whole of a woman's property to her husband for his absolute use, and a husband could not make a grant to his wife at the Common Law, though he might do so: (1) under the Statute of Uses, by granting an estate to another person for her use; (2) by creating a trust in her favour; (3) by the custom of particular places; (4) by surrendering copyholds to her use; and (5) by will.Equity, however, from very early times, by the doctrines of 'separate use,' 'trusts,' and 'equity to a settlement,' very largely modified the Common Law in favour of the wife; and the statute law has, by s. 1 of the Law Reform (Married Women and Tortfeasors Act), 1935 (25 & 26 Geo. 5, c. 30), almost completely abolished the property distinction between an unmarried and a married woman. See MARRIED WOMEN'S PROPERTY.At Common Law, a gift of either realty or personal-ity to a husband a...


Abatable nuisance

Abatable nuisance, means a nuisance so easily removable that the aggrieved party may lawfully cure the problem without notice to the liable party, such as overhanging tree branches, Black Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1094....


A court immediately below

A court immediately below. The expression 'a court immediately below' and a court subordinate to the High Court have different meanings, and are, therefore, not one and the same. The test for determining whether an aggrieved party has a right to appeal, other conditions being fulfilled, is not whether the judgment is of a court subordinate to the High Court but whether the judgment is of a court immediately below, and that a Single Judge of the High Court hearing a proceeding either as a court of original jurisdiction or in exercise of appellate jurisdiction is a court immediately below the Division Bench which hears an appeal against his judgment under the relevant clause of the Letters Patent, A. Rangaswamy Iyengar v. Pattammal, AIR 1971 SC 658 (659): (1971) 1 SCC 274....


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