Documents Aircraft - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: documents aircraftDocuments (aircraft)
Documents (aircraft), means any certificate of registration, maintenance or airworthiness, log books and any similar document, Civil Aviation Act, 1982, s. 88(10) (UK) Halsbury's Laws of England (2) , para 1183, p. 576.Includes information recorded in any form and, in relation to information recorded otherwise than in legible form, reference to its production include references to producing a copy of the information in legible form, Banking Act, 1987, s. 106(1) (UK) Halsbury's Laws of England (2), para 35, p. 31.Given by way of charge is a document which only gives a right to payment out of a particular fund or property, and does not absolutely transfer the fund or property, Tancred v. Delagoa Bay and East Africa Rly. Co., (1889) 23 QBD 239 DC...
Aircraft papers
Aircraft papers, 'aircraft papers' includes all books, passes charter parties, bills of lading, customs receipts, manifests, certificates, licences, lists, tickets, notes, letters and other documents and writings delivered up or found on board a captured aircraft. [Naval and Aircraft Prize Act (59 of 1971), s. 2(b)]...
aircraft piracy
aircraft piracy 1 : the hijacking of an aircraft esp. in flight ;specif : the act of seizing control of an aircraft by force, violence, threat, or intimidation with wrongful intent 2 : the felony of hijacking or seizing control of an aircraft called also air piracy ...
Chargeable aircraft
Chargeable aircraft, every aircraft designed or adapted to carry persons in addition to the flight crew is a chargeable aircraft, Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 12(2), para 778, p. 640....
Costs-annual (aircraft operation)
Costs-annual (aircraft operation), in relation to the operation of an aircraft means the best estimate reasonably practicable at the time of a particular flight in respect of the year commencing on the first day of January preceding the date of the flight, of the costs of keeping and maintaining and the indirect costs of operating the aircraft, such costs in either case excluding direct costs and being those actually and necessarily incurred without a view to profit, Air Navigation Order, 1989, SI 1989/2004, Art. 106(1) (UK) Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 2, para 1274, p. 624....
Foreign-going vessel or aircraft
Foreign-going vessel or aircraft, means any vessel or aircraft for the time being engaged in the carriage of goods or passengers between any port or airport in India and any port or airport outside India, whether touching any intermediate port or airport in India or not, and includes-(i) any naval vessel of a foreign Government taking part in any naval exercises;(ii) any vessel engaged in fishing or any other operations outside the territorial waters of India;(iii) any vessel or aircraft proceeding to a place out-side India for any purpose whatsoever. [Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962), s. 2 (21)]...
Military aircraft
Military aircraft, means an aircraft of the naval, military, air force or any other armed forces of any country and includes every aircraft commanded for the time being by a person in such force detailed for the purpose. [Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against Safety of Civil Aviation Act, 1982 (66 of 1982), s. 2(1)(d)]...
Aircraft material
Aircraft material, includes any engines, fittings, guns, gear, instruments or apparatus for use in connection with aircraft, and any of its components and accessories and petrol oil, and any other substance used for providing motive power for planes. [Air Force Act, 1950 (45 of 1950), s. 4 (iii)]...
British aircraft
British aircraft, means an aircraft registered in the United Kingdom, Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 9(2), 4th Edn., Para 435, p. 295....
Title to lands, Documents of
Title to lands, Documents of. As to dealing with title-deeds as mere personal chattels, see Swanley Coal Co. v. Denton, (1906) 2 KB 873. Properly speak-ing, however, they are not chattels; Coke calls them 'the sinewes of the land' (Co. Litt.6 a), and they are so closely connected with it that they will pass, on a conveyance of the land, without being expressly mentioned; the property in the deeds passes out of the vendor to the purchaser simply by the grant of the land itself, Williams on Personal Property. Sec. 45 (1) of the (English) Law of Property Act, 1925, provides that a vendor shall be entitled to retain documents of title where (a) he retains any part of the land to which the documents relate, or (b) the document consists of a trust instrument or other instrument creating a trust which is still subsisting or in instrument relating to the appointment or discharge of a trustee of a subsisting trust. As a rule the estate owner (q.v.) is entitled to possession of the documents rel...
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