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Deprive - Law Dictionary Search Results

taking

less likely to be considered a taking than one that deprives the owner of economically viable use of the property. 2

Person aggrieved

against whom a decision has been pronounced which has wrongfully deprived him of something has wrongfully affected his title to something',

emasculation

of depriving of virility or the state of being so deprived castration

Compensation

means a 'just equivalent' of what the owner has been deprived of, N.B. Jeejeebhoy v. Assistant Collector, AIR 1965 SC 1096:

Disfranchisement

expulsion of a corporator from membership and involves the total depriva-tion of all privileges, rights, interest, profits and advantages which the

Interest

of money who allows the borrower to use certain funds deprives himself of the use of those funds. He does so

Master and servant

been privileged, and no action is sustainable. A stranger who deprives a master of the services of his servant by enticing

Divestiture

The act of stripping or depriving the state of being divested the deprivation or surrender of

Disseize

To deprive of seizin or possession to dispossess or oust wrongfully one

Dissolve

parts sundering a relation etc to terminate to destroy to deprive of force as to dissolve a partnership to dissolve Parliament

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