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Decision

Decision, a 'decision' does not merely mean the 'conclusion' it embraces within its fold the reasons which form the basis for arriving at the 'conclusions', Mukhtiar Singh v. State of Punjab, (1995) 1 SCC 760: AIR...

For the time being

at the time of application of the rules, may be amended or unamended. Therefore, to come to a conclusion as to whether it is for one time or for indefinite period of time, the context, purpose and

Inference

Inference, means (1) A conclusion reached by considering other facts and deducing a logical consequence from them. (2) The process by which such

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Judicial, quasi judicial

are not required to act judicially and are competent to deal with issues referred to them administratively, their conclusions cannot be treated as quasi-judicial conclusions, Engineering Mazdoor Sabha v. Hind Cycles Ltd., AIR 1963 SC 874 (878);

Keeping a brothel

purpose of prostitution may not be a brothel, but it is a question of fact as to what conclusion should be drawn about the use of a place about which a person goes and freely asks for

finding

the trier of fact as to a factual issue based on the evidence presented in a case NOTE: Conclusions of law are based on findings of fact. finding of law : a court's determination of the law

Ratio decidendi

of law of the facts and circumstances of a case which constitutes its ratio decidendi and not some conclusion based upon facts which may appear to be similar. One additional or different fact can make a world

Reason to believe

of such reason, Manchand & Co. v. CIT, West Bengal, AIR 1969 Cal 431. Means coming to the conclusion on the basis of the information that a thing, condition, statement or fact exists. It only means facts

Substantial and compelling reasons

appellate court in an appeal against acquittal to review the entire evidence and to come to its own conclusion; but in doing so it should not only consider every matter on record having a bearing on the

Syllogism

a legitimate syllogism it is essential that there should be three, and no more than three, pro-positions-namely, the conclusion, or proposition to be proved, and two other propositions which together prove it, and which are called the

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Conclusive - 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.

Decision

Decision, a 'decision' does not merely mean the 'conclusion' it embraces within its fold the reasons which form the basis for arriving at the 'conclusions', Mukhtiar Singh v. State of Punjab, (1995) 1 SCC 760: AIR...

For the time being

at the time of application of the rules, may be amended or unamended. Therefore, to come to a conclusion as to whether it is for one time or for indefinite period of time, the context, purpose and

Inference

Inference, means (1) A conclusion reached by considering other facts and deducing a logical consequence from them. (2) The process by which such

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Judicial, quasi judicial

are not required to act judicially and are competent to deal with issues referred to them administratively, their conclusions cannot be treated as quasi-judicial conclusions, Engineering Mazdoor Sabha v. Hind Cycles Ltd., AIR 1963 SC 874 (878);

Keeping a brothel

purpose of prostitution may not be a brothel, but it is a question of fact as to what conclusion should be drawn about the use of a place about which a person goes and freely asks for

finding

the trier of fact as to a factual issue based on the evidence presented in a case NOTE: Conclusions of law are based on findings of fact. finding of law : a court's determination of the law

Ratio decidendi

of law of the facts and circumstances of a case which constitutes its ratio decidendi and not some conclusion based upon facts which may appear to be similar. One additional or different fact can make a world

Reason to believe

of such reason, Manchand & Co. v. CIT, West Bengal, AIR 1969 Cal 431. Means coming to the conclusion on the basis of the information that a thing, condition, statement or fact exists. It only means facts

Substantial and compelling reasons

appellate court in an appeal against acquittal to review the entire evidence and to come to its own conclusion; but in doing so it should not only consider every matter on record having a bearing on the

Syllogism

a legitimate syllogism it is essential that there should be three, and no more than three, pro-positions-namely, the conclusion, or proposition to be proved, and two other propositions which together prove it, and which are called the

  • Last »

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