Bartlett - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: bartlettBartlett
A Bartlett pear a favorite kind of pear which originated in England about 1770 and was called Williams Bonchreacutetien It was brought to America and distributed by Mr Enoch Bartlett of Dorchester Massachusetts...
Bonchreacutetien
A name given to several kinds of pears See Bartlett...
Commission Agent or Broker
Commission Agent or Broker, means a person who in the ordinary course of business makes contracts for the sale or purchase of excisable goods for others. [Central Excise Act, 1944 (1 of 1944), s. 2 (aaa)]In commerce, the order by which anyone traffics or negotiates for another; also, and much more frequently, the percentage given to factors or agents for transacting the business of others.Earning Commission.--Commission may be earned by bringing contracting parties together, although an actual contract may not be made, Green v. Bartlett, (1863) 32 LJCP 261. From a contract to employ for a time certain on commission may be implied a contract to give opportunity to earn the commission throughout the time, Turner v. Goldsmith, 1891 (1) QB 544; Warren v. Agdeshman, 38 TLR 588].Commission from the other Party.--That an agent employed by his principal to sell or otherwise to negotiate with another take a pecuniary or other benefit from that other for himself as part of the negotiation, expre...
Lottery
Lottery, a game of chance; a distribution of prizes by lot or chance, Taylor v. Smetten, (1883) 11 QBD 207. By 10 & 11 Wm. 3, c. 17, Chitty's Statutes, tit. 'Games,' all lotteries were declared to be public nuisances, and all grants, patents, or licences for the same to be contrary to law; and the (English) Gaming Act, 1802 (42 Geo. 3, c. 119), imposes a penalty of 500l. on any person keeping any place for any lottery' not authorized by Parliament' for as lotteries were found to be a ready mode for raising money for the service of the state, they were from time to time sanctioned by Acts of Parliament passed expressly for this purpose (see 4 Geo. 4, c. 60), but by 6 Geo. 4, c. 60, they were abolished. As to what constitutes 'keeping' within the Act of 1802, see Martin v. Benjamin, (1907) 1 KB 64; but a body corporate cannot be convicted (s. 41) as rogues and vagabonds, Hawke v. Hulton, (1909) 2 KB 93.A physical lot is not essential to a lottery, Barclay v. Pearson, (1893) 2 Ch 154. In ...
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