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Establishment

across the Ganges and they are clearly within the meaning of the word, 'establishment' in s. 2(6) and consequently they would also be establishments within the meaning of that expression as used in the amended Entry 27,

Joint-tenancy

necnon oneribus. By the Wills Act, 1837, a general devise passes after-acquired property; lands, acquired jure accrescendi, will consequently pass. A curious question some times arose as to what is the law in case it cannot be

Judicial Committee of the Privy Council

a court, although inform it reports to the King advising that an appeal should be allowed or disallowed: consequently dissenting opinions are not disclosed. The principal matters which come before the Judicial Committee are:-(1) Appeals from the

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Loan societies

of the larger number of operations in the case of the latter as compared to the former and consequently a lower rate of interest on loans appears to be justifiable than in the case of overdrafts and

Duress

by imprisonment or by threats. In order to constitute duress by imprisonment, either the imprisonment or the duress consequent upon it must be tortious and unlawful. By the Common Law, a contract made during duress is not

De jure judices de facto juratores respondent

of the Common Law, upon which the whole system of pleading was built. 'It is of the greatest consequence,' said Lord Hardwicke, 'to the law of England, and also to the subject, that the power of the

De la plus belle, Dower

plus belle, Dower, where a wife was endowed with the fairest part of her husband's estate. Being a consequence of the tenure by knight's service, it was virtually abolished by the statute 12 Car. 2, c. 24,

Deemed

is to be 'deemed' something else, it is to be treated as that something else with the attendant consequences, but it is not that something else, Ali M.K. v. State of Kerala, (2003) 11 SCC 632 (640).

Default

any principal debt or interest thereon or any other amount payable by a borrower to any secured creditor consequent upon which the account of such borrower is classified as non-performing asset in the books of account of

Crossed cheques

ss. 76-80; and (English) Bills of Exchange (Crossed Cheques) Act, 1906 (6 Edw. 7, c. 17) passed in consequence of Capital and Counties Bank v. Gordon, 1903 AC 240), bs. 1 of which a banker receives payment

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Consequently - 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.

Establishment

across the Ganges and they are clearly within the meaning of the word, 'establishment' in s. 2(6) and consequently they would also be establishments within the meaning of that expression as used in the amended Entry 27,

Joint-tenancy

necnon oneribus. By the Wills Act, 1837, a general devise passes after-acquired property; lands, acquired jure accrescendi, will consequently pass. A curious question some times arose as to what is the law in case it cannot be

Judicial Committee of the Privy Council

a court, although inform it reports to the King advising that an appeal should be allowed or disallowed: consequently dissenting opinions are not disclosed. The principal matters which come before the Judicial Committee are:-(1) Appeals from the

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Loan societies

of the larger number of operations in the case of the latter as compared to the former and consequently a lower rate of interest on loans appears to be justifiable than in the case of overdrafts and

Duress

by imprisonment or by threats. In order to constitute duress by imprisonment, either the imprisonment or the duress consequent upon it must be tortious and unlawful. By the Common Law, a contract made during duress is not

De jure judices de facto juratores respondent

of the Common Law, upon which the whole system of pleading was built. 'It is of the greatest consequence,' said Lord Hardwicke, 'to the law of England, and also to the subject, that the power of the

De la plus belle, Dower

plus belle, Dower, where a wife was endowed with the fairest part of her husband's estate. Being a consequence of the tenure by knight's service, it was virtually abolished by the statute 12 Car. 2, c. 24,

Deemed

is to be 'deemed' something else, it is to be treated as that something else with the attendant consequences, but it is not that something else, Ali M.K. v. State of Kerala, (2003) 11 SCC 632 (640).

Default

any principal debt or interest thereon or any other amount payable by a borrower to any secured creditor consequent upon which the account of such borrower is classified as non-performing asset in the books of account of

Crossed cheques

ss. 76-80; and (English) Bills of Exchange (Crossed Cheques) Act, 1906 (6 Edw. 7, c. 17) passed in consequence of Capital and Counties Bank v. Gordon, 1903 AC 240), bs. 1 of which a banker receives payment

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