Evident - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: evidentEvident
Clear to the vision especially clear to the understanding and satisfactory to the judgment as the figure or color of a body is evident to the senses the guilt of an offender can not always be made evident...
Self evident
Evident without proof or reasoning producing certainty or conviction upon a bare presentation to the mind as a self evident proposition or truth...
Fed. R. Evid.
Fed. R. Evid. Federal Rules of Evidence see also the Important Laws section ...
Evidently
In an evident manner clearly plainly...
Evidentness
State of being evident...
manifest
manifest 1 : capable of being readily perceived by the senses and esp. by sight [a injury] 2 : capable of being easily understood or recognized : clearly evident, obvious, and indisputable [vacating an arbitrator's award because of the arbitrator's disregard of the law] man·i·fest·ly adv vt : to make evident or certain by showing or displaying [ing the intent to make a gift] man·i·fes·ta·tion [ma-nə-fə-stā-shən, -fe-stā-] n n : a list of passengers or an invoice of cargo for a vehicle (as a ship or plane) ...
Indubitable
Not dubitable or doubtful too evident to admit of doubt unquestionable evident apparently certain as an indubitable conclusion...
Per
A prefix used to signify through throughout by for or as an intensive as perhaps by hap or chance perennial that lasts throughout the year perforce through or by force perfoliate perforate perspicuous evident throughout or very evident perplex literally to entangle very much...
Any mistake apparent from record
Any mistake apparent from record, cannot be defined scientifically, precisely or exhaustively and should be determined in the light of the fact and circum-stances of each case. It is well-settled that an error can be said to be an error apparent on the face of the record, if it is patent, manifest or self-evident. If one has to travel beyond the record to see whether the judgment or order is correct or not, the error cannot be described as an error apparent on the face of record, M. Ahammedkutty Haji v. Tahasildar Kozhikode, Kerala, (2005) 3 SCC 351.Means an error can be said to be an error apparent on the face of record, if it is patent, manifest or self-evident. If one has to travel beyond the record to see whether the judgment or order is correct or not, the error cannot be described as an error apparent, on the face of the record, M. Ahamadekutty Haji v. Tahsildar, (2005) 3 SCC 351 (359). [Kerala Building Tax Act, 1975 (7 of 1975), s. 15(1)]...
Discretion
Discretion, the word 'discretion' connotes necessarily an act of a judicial character, as used with reference to discretion exercised judicially, it implies the absence of a hard and fast rule, and it require an actual exercise of judgment and a consideration of the facts and circumstances with are necessary to make a sound, fair and just determination and a knowledge of the facts upon which discretion may properly operate. When it is said that something it to be done according to the rules of reason and justice and not according to the rules of reason and justice and not according to private opinion; according to law and not honour. It only gives certain latitude liberty accorded by statute or rules, to a judge as distinguished from a ministerial or administrative official, in adjudicating on matters brought before him, Aero Traders Pvt. Ltd. v. Ravinder Kumar Suri, AIR 2005 SC 15.--The word 'discretion' connotes necessarily an act of a judicial character, and, as used with reference ...
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