Captive Consumption - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: captive consumption Page 1 of about 4 results ( seconds)Captive consumption
Captive consumption, the phrase 'captive con-sumption', would mean that any thing which is manufactured or produced, would not go out of the hands of the manufacturers but they consume it for their own purpose. Certainly, in case such a venture, as established for manufacture of goods or a thing for its own consumption, sells it to outsiders for use and consumption by them, it may require to have a licence for such an activity, A.P. Gas Power Corp. Ltd. v. A.P. State Regulatory Commission, (2004) 10 SCC 511: AIR 2004 SC 3090. [Electricity Act, 2003, s. 2(8)]...
Yarn
Yarn, means any fibre, wool, silk flax, cotton, nylon, etc., spun into strands for weaving, knitting or making thread, AIR 1980 MP 69 (71). [Textile Committee Act, 1968, s. 2(g)(f)]The fabric which is woven includes the weft which means yarn woven across the width of the fabric through the lengthwise yarn. Thus the activity of the weaving involves passing of the weft through the warp, Ess Dee Carpet Enterprises v. Union of India, AIR 1990 SC 455 (457): (1990) 1 SCC 461: (1989) Supp 2 SCR 417.There is no particular definition of 'yarn' in the Act or the Rules or the notifications. According to the oxford Dictionary 'yarn' means any spun thread specially of kinds prepared by waving, knitting or rope-making. According to the Webster's New World Dictionary, it is defined as any fiber, as wool, silk, flax, cotton, nylon, etc., spun into strands for weaving, knitting or making thread, Aditya Mills Ltd. v. Union of India, AIR 1988 SC 2237 (2229): (1988) Supp 2 SCR 668: (1988) 4 SCC 315 (318)....
Dealer, auction
Dealer, auction, a person who in the normal course of his business attends sales by auction for the purpose of purchasing goods with a view to reselling them, Auctions (Bidding Agreements) Act, 1927, s. 1(2) (UK), Halsbury's Laws of England (2), para 944, p. 461.means a person carrying on the business of selling fertilisers, whether wholesale or retail (or industrial use), and includes a manufacturer and a pool-handling agency carrying on such business and the agents of such person, manufacturer or pool-handling agency, State of Punjab v. Gunomajra Cooperative Agriculture Service Society Ltd., (2000) 9 SCC 210.There is nothing either in the main definition in s. 2(5) or in the Explanation of the Orissa Taxation (on Goods Carried by Road and Inland Water ways) Act, 1959 to suggest that the manager or agent of the dealer (principal) should have his own business within the State of Orissa before he could be proceeded against or assessed under the Act. It would be sufficient if the manager...
Fer' natur', animals
Fer' natur', animals. Beasts and birds of a wild disposition, such as deer, hares, coneys in a warren, pheasants, partridges, etc., as distingui-shed from those domit' natur', or tame, such as horses, sheep, poultry, etc. They are not whilst living the subjects of absolute property, so that they cannot be the subject of larceny, nor are they liable to distress for rent. But a man may acquire a qualified property in them, either (1) Per industriam, by his reclaiming and making them tame by art and industry, or by so confining them that they cannot escape, e.g., deer in a park, hares or rabbits in an enclosed warren, etc. The property in them only continues so long as they remain in a man's actual possession, but ceases if they regain their liberty, unless they have animus revertendi, as in the case of pigeons, tame hawks, etc. (2) Ratione impotenti', on account of their inability, as when birds, coneys, etc., make their nests or burrows on a mans' land, then he has a qualified property ...
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