Curing - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: curingcure
cure cured cur·ing vt : to deal with in a way that eliminates or corrects: as a : to use judicial procedures to undo (damage to a litigant's case caused by procedural errors made during a trial) [subsequent proceedings cured harm caused by trial court's error in impermissibly allowing…statements of government witness "National Law Journal"] ;also : to judicially correct or negate (procedural errors) [ a defect in the pleadings] b : to correct or make acceptable (a defective performance or delivery under a contract) [the nonconformity would be seasonably cured "J. J. White and R. S. Summers"] c : to negate (a default by a debtor in bankruptcy) by restoring the debtor and creditor to their positions before the default vi : to eliminate or correct a defect ;esp : to correct or make acceptable a defective performance or delivery under a contract [the seller may seasonably notify the buyer of his intention to and may then within the contract time make a conforming deliv...
Leprosy cured person
Leprosy cured person, means any person who has been cured of leprosy but is suffering from--(i) loss of sensation in hands or feet as well as loss of sensation and paresis in the eye and eye-lid but with no manifest deformity;(ii) manifest deformity and paresis but having sufficient mobility in their hands and feet to enable them to engage in normal economic activity;(iii) extreme physical deformity as well as advanced age which prevents him from undertaking any gainful occupation. [Persons with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation) Act, 1995 (1 of 1996), s. 2 (n)]...
Curing
p a amp vb n of Cure...
Curing
Curing, includes wilting, drying, fermenting and any process for rendering an unmanufactured product fit for marketing or manufacture. [The Central Excise Act, 1944 (1 of 1944), s. 2 (c)]...
Dean
Dean [fr. decanus, Lat.; deka, Gk., ten], an ecclesiastical governor or dignitary, so called as he is supposed to have originally presided over ten canons or prebendaries at the least. In cathedrals of the old foundation in England, the dean is the principal of the four chief dignitaries, exercising a general supervision over the other members of the capitular body, with special reference to the cure of souls. In cathedrals of the new foundation, the duties of the deans are defined by the statutes of each chapter.Considered in respect of the differences of office, deans are of six kinds:--(1) Deans of Chapters, who are either of cathedral or collegiate churches. (2) Deans of Peculiars, who have sometimes both jurisdiction and cure of souls, and sometimes jurisdiction only. (3) Rural Deans, deputies of the bishop, planted all round his diocese, the better to inspect the conduct of the parochial clergy, to inquire into and report dilapidations, and to examine the candidates for confirmat...
Tobacco
Tobacco. The growth of tobacco was formerly prohibited in any part of the United Kingdom, and any person growing it was liable to a penalty of 10l. for every rood grown, recoverable by penal action. See 12 Car. 2, c. 34 (the preamble of which shows the origin of the prohibition to have been the protection and maintenance of the colonies and plantations in America, and of the commerce of this country with them); 15 Car. 2, c. 7; and the (English) Tobacco Cultivation Act, 1831 (1 & 2 Wm. 4, c. 13). As to Ireland the Irish Tobacco Act, 1907 (7 Edw. 7, c. 3), largely removed the restrictions as to growth, etc., and similar provision is now made for Scotland and England by the Finance (1909-10) Act, 1910, which repeals the two Acts of Charles II. and the Act of 1831, and by s. 83 (5) entirely removes all prohibition or restraint on the growth, making, or curing of tobacco in England and Scotland, and to the same time imposes [s. 83 (2)] an excise duty of 5s. for a licence to grow, cultivate...
Treatment
Treatment, is said to be also employed to indicate all the steps taken in order to effect a cure of an injury or disease, Himanshu Sekhar Nandy v. District Magistrate, Balasore, 1976 Cut LT 1262: 1976 Cut LR (Cr) 457.Treatment, would include such steps as would not only tend to effect cure of some disease but also as would prevent further deterioration of the disease. The expression connotes a remedial measure either to cure or to prevent deterioration. Hence, prescription of pair of spectacles by eye specialist would be treatment, Himanshu Sekhar Nandy v. D.M. Balasore, (1976) 42 Cut LT 1262....
Curative
Relating to or employed in the cure of diseases tending to cure...
Homeopathy
The art of curing founded on resemblances the theory and its practice that disease is cured tuto cito et jucunde by remedies which produce on a healthy person effects similar to the symptoms of the complaint under which the patient suffers the remedies being usually administered in minute doses This system was founded by Dr Samuel Hahnemann and is opposed to allopathy or heteropathy...
Parson
Parson [fr. persona, Lat., because the parson omnium personam in ecclesi' sustinet; or from parochianus, the parish-priest.--Johnson; anciently written persone.--Todd], 'the rector of a church parochiall' (Co. Litt. 300 a); one that has a parochial charge or cure of souls. 'The most legal, most beneficial, and most honourable title that a parish priest can enjoy,' says Sir W. Blackstone.A parson has the freehold for life of the parsonage-house, the glebe, the tithes, and other dues. But these are sometimes appropriated, that is to say, the benefice is perpetually annexed to some spiritual corporation, either sole or aggregate, being the patron of the living; which the law esteems equally capable of providing for the service of the church as any single private clergyman: see 1 Bl. Com. 384. Many appropriations, however, are now in the hands of lay persons, who are usually styled, by way of distinction, lay impropriators. In all appro-priations there is generally a spiritual person attac...
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