Cognize - Law Dictionary Search Results
Expressly
and specifically provided differently no Court of Session can take cognizance of any offence directly, without the case being committed to
Executory fines
Executory fines, the fines sur cognizance de droit tantum; sur concessit; and sur done grant en
Executed fine
or a fine upon acknowledgment of the right of the cognizee, as that which he has of the gift of the
Excommunication
by a spiritual court for an offense failing under ecclesiastical cognizance; expulsion from religions society or community, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th
Evocation
Evocation, withdrawing a case from the cognizance of an inferior Court and bring it before a superior
Mehar
of mehar money, as a customary discharge, is within the cognizance of s. 127, Criminal Procedure Code, 1973. The purpose of
Reason to suspect
mean the sagacity of rationally inferring the commission of a cognizable offence based on the specific articulate facts mentioned in the
Military offences
Military offences, those offences which are cognizable by the Courts military-as insubordination, sleeping on guard, desertion, etc,
Court of competent jurisdiction
the non-compliance of the procedural requirement. The inability to take cognizance of an offence without a committal order does not mean
University Court
University Court. See CHANCELLORS OF THE TWO UNIVERSITIES; COGNIZANCE.
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