Calculable - Law Dictionary Search Results
Damages
are either liquidated or unliquidated. Whenever the amount to which the plaintiff is entitled can be ascertained by calculation or fixed by any scale or other positive data, it is said to be 'liquidated' or made clear.
Corn Sales Act, 1921 (English)
Act, award, or instrument of an imperial bushel shall have effect as if the price or value were calculated on that of sixty imperial pounds of wheat, fifty of barley and thirty nine of oats.
Criminal contempt
Criminal contempt, any act done or writing published which is calculated to bring a Court or a Judge into contempt, or to lower his authority, or to interfere with
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Daily ration
Daily ration, means the average total quantity of feeding stuffs, calculated on a moisture content of 12 per cent. required daily by an animal of given species, age, category
Casual
mean: (i) Subject to or produced by chance; accidental, fortuitous, (ii) Coming at uncertain times, not to be calculated on, unsettled'. A receipt of interest which is foreseen and anticipated cannot be regarded as casual even if
Duty of excise
duty of excise is a tax-levy on home-produced goods of a specified class or description, the duty being calculated according to the quantity or value of the goods and which is levied because of the mere fact
Expenditure
SCC 666: AIR 1997 SC 2063. 'Expenditure' is equal to 'expense' and 'expense is money laid out by calculation and intention though many uses of the word this element may not be present, as when we speak
Clerical or arithmetical error
and does not depend for its discovery on argument or disputation. An arithmetical error is a mistake of calculation, and a clerical error is a mistake in writing or typing, Sooraj Devi v. Pyare Lal, (1981) 2
Articles, Lords of the
the Scottish Parliament, which in the mode of its election, and by the nature of its powers, was calculated to increase the influence of the Crown, and to confer upon it a power equivalent to that of
Borrowing powers
powers the excess is void, Wenlock v. River Dee Co., (1885) 10 AC 354. And see Re Harris Calculating Machine Co., (1914) 1 Ch 920, as to the lender's right of subrogation to creditors who have been
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Calculable - Law Dictionary Search Results
Damages
are either liquidated or unliquidated. Whenever the amount to which the plaintiff is entitled can be ascertained by calculation or fixed by any scale or other positive data, it is said to be 'liquidated' or made clear.
Corn Sales Act, 1921 (English)
Act, award, or instrument of an imperial bushel shall have effect as if the price or value were calculated on that of sixty imperial pounds of wheat, fifty of barley and thirty nine of oats.
Criminal contempt
Criminal contempt, any act done or writing published which is calculated to bring a Court or a Judge into contempt, or to lower his authority, or to interfere with
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Daily ration
Daily ration, means the average total quantity of feeding stuffs, calculated on a moisture content of 12 per cent. required daily by an animal of given species, age, category
Casual
mean: (i) Subject to or produced by chance; accidental, fortuitous, (ii) Coming at uncertain times, not to be calculated on, unsettled'. A receipt of interest which is foreseen and anticipated cannot be regarded as casual even if
Duty of excise
duty of excise is a tax-levy on home-produced goods of a specified class or description, the duty being calculated according to the quantity or value of the goods and which is levied because of the mere fact
Expenditure
SCC 666: AIR 1997 SC 2063. 'Expenditure' is equal to 'expense' and 'expense is money laid out by calculation and intention though many uses of the word this element may not be present, as when we speak
Clerical or arithmetical error
and does not depend for its discovery on argument or disputation. An arithmetical error is a mistake of calculation, and a clerical error is a mistake in writing or typing, Sooraj Devi v. Pyare Lal, (1981) 2
Articles, Lords of the
the Scottish Parliament, which in the mode of its election, and by the nature of its powers, was calculated to increase the influence of the Crown, and to confer upon it a power equivalent to that of
Borrowing powers
powers the excess is void, Wenlock v. River Dee Co., (1885) 10 AC 354. And see Re Harris Calculating Machine Co., (1914) 1 Ch 920, as to the lender's right of subrogation to creditors who have been
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- 5
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