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Can Buoy - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Can buoy

See under Buoy n...


Buoys and beacons

Buoys and beacons. As to supervision of these marks and signs of the sea, see ss. 634 et seq. And s. 742 of the (English) Merchant Shipping Act, 1894....


can do

having an eager willingness to accept and overcome challenges as a can do kind of person the citys indomitable optimism and can do spirit...


Canned software

Canned software, is goods and succeptible to sales tax, and means sold computer software packages of the shelf. The canned software packages were of the ownership of companies/persons who had developed those software, Tata Consultancy Services v. State of Andhra Pradesh, (2005) 1 SCC 308...


King can do no wrong

King can do no wrong, in India in criminal jurisdic-tion the principle 'king can do no wrong' is not applicable. The Government is as much bound by criminal liability as an individual, Superintendent and Remembrancer of Legal Affairs v. Corporation of Calcutta, AIR 1967 SC 997: (1967) 2 SCR 170.In India in the sector of tort, State of Rajasthan v. Mst. Vidhyawati, AIR 1962 SC 933: 1962 Supp (2) SCR 989.Also this principle is on the verge of total abandonment, Pushpa Thakur v. Union of India, AIR 1986 SC 1199....


Can

Can, clearance, averment, Anc. Hist. Eng.1. To be able to do something. 2. To have permission (as often interpreted by Courts), Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn....


When can or be read as and

When can or be read as and, depending upon the context, 'or' may be read as 'and' but the court would not do it unless it is so obliged because 'or' does not generally mean 'and' and 'and' does not generally mean 'or', R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, AIR 1984 SC 684: (1984) 2 SCC 183: (1984) 2 SCR 495....


Buoyage

Buoys taken collectively a series of buoys as for the guidance of vessels into or out of port the providing of buoys...


Trinity house

Trinity house, a society at Deptford Strond, incor-porated by Henry VIII. in 1515, for the promotion of commerce and navigation by licensing and regulating pilots, and ordering and erecting beacons, lighthouses, buoys, etc., and stated in the preamble of 8 Eliz. c. 13 to be 'charged with the conduction of the Queen's Majesty's Navy Royal, and bound to foresee the good increase and maintenance of ships, and of all kinds of men trained and brought up to watercraft most meet for Her Majesty's marine service.' Under the Harbours, Docks and Piers Clauses Act, 1847 (q.v.), buoys are to be laid down as may be directed by, and lighthouses, beacons are not to be erected, nor are lights to be exhibited, without permission of Trinity House.The Trinity House, by the Merchant Shipping Act, 1894, repealing and re-enacting the Merchant Shipping Act, 1854, is the chief lighthouse and pilotage authority for England, and the Scots and Irish Boards are to some extent under its control, Pulling's Shipping...


Buoy

A float esp a floating object moored to the bottom to mark a channel or to point out the position of something beneath the water as an anchor shoal rock etc...


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