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Custody

control of the person. The expression 'custody' as used in s. 439 must be taken to be a compendious expression referring to the events on the happening of which the Magistrate can entertain a bail petition of

Bailment

Bailment [fr. bailler, Fr., to deliver], a compendious expression to signify a contract resulting from delivery; perhaps best defined as a 'delivery of a thing in

Compendiousness

The state or quality of being compendious

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Cross cases

on the same day. Such two different versions of the same incident resulting in two criminal cases are compendiously called 'case and counter case' by some High Court and 'cross cases' by some other High Courts, Sudhir

De injuria sua propria absque tali causa

De injuria sua propria absque tali causa (of his own wrong, without any such cause as alleged), more compendiously called the traverse de injuria, a species of traverse by replication in pleading, now obsolete, which varied from

Fabricating false evidence

Fabricating false evidence, S. 192 (of IPC) defines compendiously the offence of fabricating false evidence. It reads thus: 'Whoever causes any circumstances to exist... or makes any

Goods

Added Tax Act, 2003, s. 2(13)] Goods, Notification No. 123/81-CE exempted capital goods, raw materials, components, consumables etc. Compendiously known as 'goods' from pay-ment of basis excise duty and additional excise duty subject to conditions which further

Hereditaments

and associations are so intimately connected with the subjects which it covers that it still serves to differentiate compendiously and usefully the same class of property; cf. Form No. 5, 5th Sched., L.P. Act, 1925; and L.P.

May presume and shall presume

presume' are defined in s. 4 of the Evidence Act. The presumptions falling under the former category are compendiously known as 'factual presumptions' or 'discretionary presumptions' and those falling under the latter as 'legal presumptions' or 'compulsory

Personality of laws

qu' ad rem spectant. Whenever they wish to express that the operation of a law is universal, they compendiously announce that it is a personal statute; and whenever, on the other hand, they wish to express that

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Compendious - Law Dictionary Search Results

Research workspace

Save terms and build your research trail

A free trial unlocks notes, tags, search history, and the full AI Studio desk for judgment research.

Custody

control of the person. The expression 'custody' as used in s. 439 must be taken to be a compendious expression referring to the events on the happening of which the Magistrate can entertain a bail petition of

Bailment

Bailment [fr. bailler, Fr., to deliver], a compendious expression to signify a contract resulting from delivery; perhaps best defined as a 'delivery of a thing in

Compendiousness

The state or quality of being compendious

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Cross cases

on the same day. Such two different versions of the same incident resulting in two criminal cases are compendiously called 'case and counter case' by some High Court and 'cross cases' by some other High Courts, Sudhir

De injuria sua propria absque tali causa

De injuria sua propria absque tali causa (of his own wrong, without any such cause as alleged), more compendiously called the traverse de injuria, a species of traverse by replication in pleading, now obsolete, which varied from

Fabricating false evidence

Fabricating false evidence, S. 192 (of IPC) defines compendiously the offence of fabricating false evidence. It reads thus: 'Whoever causes any circumstances to exist... or makes any

Goods

Added Tax Act, 2003, s. 2(13)] Goods, Notification No. 123/81-CE exempted capital goods, raw materials, components, consumables etc. Compendiously known as 'goods' from pay-ment of basis excise duty and additional excise duty subject to conditions which further

Hereditaments

and associations are so intimately connected with the subjects which it covers that it still serves to differentiate compendiously and usefully the same class of property; cf. Form No. 5, 5th Sched., L.P. Act, 1925; and L.P.

May presume and shall presume

presume' are defined in s. 4 of the Evidence Act. The presumptions falling under the former category are compendiously known as 'factual presumptions' or 'discretionary presumptions' and those falling under the latter as 'legal presumptions' or 'compulsory

Personality of laws

qu' ad rem spectant. Whenever they wish to express that the operation of a law is universal, they compendiously announce that it is a personal statute; and whenever, on the other hand, they wish to express that

  • Last »

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