Detail - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: detaildetailed
Developed or executed with care and in minute detail as a detailed plan...
Detail
A minute portion one of the small parts a particular an item used chiefly in the plural as the details of a scheme or transaction...
Detailer
One who details...
detailing
description of something in detail...
Estimates
Estimates, in India, the estimates are presented to the Lok Sabha in the form of estimates, Parliamentary Practice, Erskine May, 22nd Edn., 2001, p. 743.Is the certain details of the anticipated expenses of each department and the specific purposes for which the money is required, the Office of the Speaker in the Parliaments of Commonwealth, Wilding & Philip Laundry, p. 252.In U.K., the Crown's request for supply are sub-mitted to the House of Commons in the form of estimates, Parliamentary Practice, Erskine, May, 22nd Edn., 1997, p. 745.Is the annual detailed statements of the public expenditure proposed to be undertaken by the Government, Parliamentary Dictionary, L.A. Abraham and S.C. Hawtrey, 1956 and H.M. Barclay, 3rd Edn., 1970, p. 94.Contain the details of the anticipated expenses of each department and the specific purposes for which the money is required, the Office of the Speaker in the Parliaments of Commonwealth, Wilding and Philip Laundy, p. 252.In India, the estimates are...
Mutatis mutandis
Mutatis mutandis, implies applicability of any provision with necessary changes in points of detail, Prahlad Sharma v. State of U.P., (2004) 4 SCC 113.Mutatis mutandis, means 'with the necessary changes in points of detail, Earl Jowitt's the Dictionary of English Law (1959), Mariyappa v. State of Karnataka, (1998) 3 SCC 276: AIR 1998 SC 1334Mutatis mutandis. With the necessary changes in points of detail.Earl Jowitt's The Dictionary of English Law (1959) defines 'mutatis mutandis as 'with the necessary changes in points of detail'. Black's law Dictionary (Revised 7th Edn., 1999 at p. 1039) defines 'mutatis mutandis' as 'with the necessary changes in points of detail, meaning that matters or things are generally the same, but to altered when necessary, as to names, offices, and the like, Houseman v. Waterhouse. In Bouvier's Law Dictionary (3rd Revision, Vol. II), the expression, 'mutatis mutandis' is defined as 'The necessary changes. This is a phrase of frequent practical occurrence, m...
Material facts and material particulars
Material facts and material particulars, all those facts which are essential to clothe the petitioner with a complete cause of action, are 'material facts' which must be pleaded, and failure to plead even a single material fact amounts to disobedience of the mandate of s. 83(1)(a) of Representation of the People Act. 'Particulars', on the other hand, are 'the details of the case set up by the party'. 'Material particulars' within contemplation of cl. (b) of s. 83(1) of RPA, 1951 would therefore mean all the details which are necessary to amplify, refine and embellish the material facts already pleaded in the petition in compliance with the requirements of cl. (a), Shri Udhav Singh v. Madhav Rao Scindia, AIR 1976 SC 744: (1977) 1 SCC 511: (1976) 2 SCR 246.Distinction between 'material facts' and 'particulars'. The word 'material' in material facts under s. 83 of the Act means facts necessary for the purpose of formulating a complete cause of action; and if any one 'material' fact is omi...
Delegated legislation
Delegated legislation, Delegated Legislation has been defined by Salmond as 'that which proceeds from any authority other than the sovereign power and is therefore dependent for its continued exis-tence and validity on some superior or supreme authority'. (See: Salmond, Jurisprudence, 12th Edn., page 116), Agricultural Marks Committees v. Shalimar Chemical Works, AIR 1997 SC 2502 (2506): (1997) 5 SCC 516.Most of the delegated legislation is called statutory instruments, they are to be laid before Parliament and are subject to approval or disapproval by either House; Parliamentary Practice, Erskine May, 22nd Edn., 1997, p. 576.In England, the practice of delegating legislative power increased tremendously after the Reform Bill of 1872 and reforms in Local Government, the first world was caused a further rapid rise in delegated legislation, The Office of the Speaker in the Parliaments of Commonwealth, by Wilding and Philip Laundry, p. 200.The Parliament lays down the principles of law an...
Particulars
Particulars. The courts have a general jurisdiction, independently of statute, to order a detailed statement of the demand in any litigation, or of any defence, to be given that surprise may be avoided, and substantial justice promoted, 2 Chit. Arch. Prac. The necessity for application for particulars has become less frequent since the Judicature Acts, as the Rules of Court under those Acts have substituted a statement of claim containing the material facts on which the plaintiff relied for the declaration under the old practice, which only contained a legal statement of the plaintiff's cause of action.It is provided, however by (English) R.S.C., Ord. XIX, R. 7, that:-A further and better statement of the nature of the claim or defence, or further and better particulars of any matter stated in any pleading, notice, or written proceeding requiring particulars, may in all cases be ordered, upon such terms, as to costs and otherwise, as may be just;and see the Index to the Annual Practice...
Schedule
Schedule, a small scroll; a writing additional or appendant, as a list of fixtures in a lease or details of any matter contained in the body of a deed, document., or of enactments repealed and other supplementary matter in an Act of Parliament, e.g., the Merchant Shipping Act, 1894, which has twenty-two schedules; an inventory.--shall mean a schedule to the Act or Regulation in which the word occurs. [General Clauses Act, 1897 (10 of 1897), s. 3(52)]Schedule, in the House of Commons, when a Bill is under consideration, the Schedule is taken up after all the clauses and new clauses have been considered; this order may be changed by moving a motion to that effect and the Schedule may be considered after the clause to which it is related. A Schedule can be amended like any clause, new Schedule can also be moved and considered, Parliamentary Practice, Erskine May, 22nd Edn., 2001, p. 494.Schedule, is a list, catalogue, or inventory of details, often as an explanatory supplement to a Will, ...
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