Enteritis - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: enteritisenter
enter : to go or come in ;specif : to go upon real property by right of entry esp. to take possession [lessor shall have the right to and take possession] often used in deeds and leases vt 1 : to come or go into [he breaks into and s a vehicle "Code of Alabama"] see also break, breaking and entering 2 : record register 3 : to put in correct form before a court or on a record [ed judgment against the defendant] [ing a plea] compare render 4 : to go upon (real property) by right of entry esp. to take possession [if the lessee defaults, the lessor may the premises] compare distrain en·ter·able adj enter into : to make oneself a party to or in [no State shall enter into any treaty, alliance or confederation "U.S. Constitution art. I"] [entered into a lease] ...
Which is entered into
Which is entered into, the expression 'is entered into' is at the worst ambiguous and is capable of meaning either only those entered into after the date of the notification, or as meaning 'is or has been entered into' i.e., including a contract which having been entered into before is subsisting on that date, Raghubar Dayal Jai Parkash v. Union of India, AIR 1962 SC 263 (273): (1962) 3 SCR 547. [Forward Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1952 s. 15]...
Entering short
Entering short. When bills not due are paid into a bank by a customer, it is the custom of some bankers not to carry the amount of the bills directly to his credit, but to 'enter them short,' as it is called, i.e., to note down the receipt of the bills, their amounts, and the times when they become due in a previous column of the page, and the amounts when received are carried forward into the usual cash column. See Giles v. Perkins, (1807) 9 East 13. Sometimes, instead of entering such bills short, bankers credit the customer directly with the amount of the bills as cash, charging interest on any advances they may make on their account, and allow him at once to draw upon them to that amount. If the banker becomes bankrupt, the property in bills entered short, and not credited to the customer unless by way of advance, does not pass to his trustee, but the customer is entitled to them if they remain in his hands, or to their proceeds, if received, subject to any lien the banker may have...
breaking and entering
breaking and entering : the act of gaining passage into and entering another's property (as a building or vehicle) without privilege or by force ;also : the crime of breaking and entering see also burglary ...
Be permitted to enter
Be permitted to enter, these words do not cast any absolute duty on the employer to prevent the entry and the mere fact that a person has entered such a pit etc. would not itself prove that he had been permitted to enter. The Court will have to look into the facts and circumstances of the case, Chinibhai Haridas v. State of Bombay, AIR 1960 SC 37 (40): (1960) 1 SCR 654. [Factories Act (63 of 1948) s. 36(3)]...
For the time being entered in the electral roll
For the time being entered in the electral roll, the words 'for the time being entered in the electoral roll' in s. 62(1) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 must be taken to mean 'for the time being entered in the electoral roll in accordance with law', Ramji Prasad Singh v. Ram Bilas Jha, AIR 1976 SC 2573: (1977) 1 SCC 260: (1977) 1 SCR 741....
Enter
Enter, to enrol, to commence officially, to inscribe upon the records of a Court or upon an official list. See also ENTRY....
Burglary
Burglary [fr. burg, Sax., a house, and larron, a thief, fr. latro, Lat.]. At Common Law burglary is the breaking and entering of the dwelling-house of another in the night-time with intent to commit a felony therein. S. 25 of the (English) Larceny Act, 1916, provides that-Means the act of breaking and entering an inhabited structure (as a house) especially at night with intent to commit a felony (as murder or larcency), the act of entering or remaining unlawfully (as after closing to the public) in a building with intent to commit a crime (as a felony). The crime of burglary was originally defined under the common law to protect people, since there were other laws, Webster's Dictionary of Law, Indian Edn. (2005), p. 61.Burglary, is the common law offence of breaking and entering another's dwelling at night with the intent to commit a felony. The modern statutory offence of breaking and entering any building not just a dwelling and not only at night - with the intent to commit a felony....
Advocate
Advocate, [Lat. Advocatus], a patron of a cause assisting his client with advice, and pleading for him. He is defined by Ulpian (Dig. 50, tit. 13) to be any person who aids another in the conduct of a suit or action. The term is at the present day confined to persons professionally conducting cases in Court, i.e., Barristers and Solicitors (q.v.).In the English Ecclesiastical and Admiralty Courts, until 1857, certain persons learned in the civil and canon law, called advocates, had the exclusive right of acting as counsel. They were members of a college situate at Doctor's Commons, incorporated by charter, June 22, 8 Geo. 3, under the title of 'The College of Doctors of Law exercent in the Ecclesiastical and Admiralty Courts,' and had, previously to their admission to that college, taken the degree of Doctor of Laws at an English university. The jurisdiction of the Ecclesiastical Courts in matters matrimonial and testamentary was in 1857 transferred to the Court for Divorce and Matrimo...
entry
entry pl: en·tries 1 : the privilege of entering real property see also right of entry 2 : the act of entering real property [a warrantless by the officer] see also trespass 3 : the act of making or entering a record (as a plea or judgment) [an of default] ;also : a record entered [a docket ] ...
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