Ex Cadre Post - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: ex cadre postEx cadre post
Ex cadre post, means a post outside the cadre of posts comprised in a Service. Therefore, all posts in the Service, whether permanent or temporary, are generally regarded as Cadre Posts, O.P. Singla v. Union of India, (1984) 4 SCC 450: AIR 1984 SC 1595 (1603): (1985) 1 SCR 351....
Cadre post
Cadre post, 'Cadre post' in the Fundamental Rules means a post as specified in the Schedule and includes a temporary post. The words 'in the cadre to which they belong' in Rule 6(3) cover the cases of permanent as well as temporary Additional District and Sessions Judges at the time of initial recruitment, G.R. Luthra v. Lt. Governor, Delhi, (1975) 1 SCR 974: AIR 1974 SC 1908: (1975) 3 SCC 258 (261) [F.R. 9(4)]....
Service and cadre
Service and cadre, according to the scheme of the Rules, 'Service' is a narrower body than the 'Cadre'. By the definition contained in r. 2(d), membership of the Service is limited to persons who are appointed in a substantive capacity to the Service. By the second part of r. 2(b), if read in an extended sense every temporary post which carries the same designation as that of any of the posts specified in the Schedule is a Cadre Post, whether such post is comprised in the Service or not. Such posts and the posts specified in the Schedule will together constitute the Cadre under r. 2(b), O.P. Singla v. Union of India, AIR 1984 SC 1595: (1984) 4 SCC 450: (1985) 1 SCR 351....
Cadre
Cadre, In service jurisprudence, the term 'cadre' has a definite legal connotation. In the legal sense, the word 'cadre' is not synonymous with 'service'. Fundamental Rule 9(4) defines the word 'cadre' to mean the strength of a service or part of a service sanctioned as a separate unit, Chakradhar Paswan v. State of Bihar, (1988) 2 SCC 214: AIR 1988 SC 959: (1988) 3 SCR 180 [F.R. 9(4)].Includes both permanent and temporary posts, G.R. Luthra v. Lt. Governor, Delhi, (1975) 1 SCR 974: AIR 1974 SC 1908: (1975) 3 SCC 258. [Delhi Higher Judicial Service Rules, 1970, R. 6 (3)]In the service jurisprudence the expression 'cadre' means the unit of strength of a service or a part of it as determined by the employer, State of Maharashtra v. Purshottam, (1996) 9 SCC 266 (269).Cadre, would ordinarily mean the strength of a service or a part of the service so determined by the Government constituting the post therein, Shiv Dutt Judiya v. Ganga Divi, (2002) 3 SCC 182....
Regular Cadre of Prosecuting Officers
Regular Cadre of Prosecuting Officers, means a Cadre of Prosecuting Officer which includes therein the post of a Public Prosecutor, by whatever name called, and which provides for promotion of Assistant Public Prosecutors by whatever name called, to that post. [Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974), s. 24(6). Expln. (a) (Prov)]...
Local cadre
Local cadre, 'Local cadre' means any local cadre of posts under the State Government organised in pursuance of paragraph 3, or constituted otherwise, for any part of the State. S. Prakasha Rao v Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, AIR 1990 SC 997: (1990) 2 SCC 259 (261) [A.P. Employment (Organisation of Local Cadre and Regulation of Direct Recruitment) Order, 1975, R. 2(1)(e)]...
ex post facto
ex post facto [Late Latin, literally, from a thing done afterward] : after the fact : retroactively [cannot judge ex post facto] adj 1 : done, made, or formulated after the fact : retroactive 2 : of or relating to an ex post facto law [the chief concerns of the ex post facto ban "L. H. Tribe"] ...
ex post facto clause
ex post facto clause often cap E&P&F&C : the clause in Article I, Section 9 of the U.S. Constitution forbidding Congress from passing any ex post facto laws ...
ex post facto law
ex post facto law : a civil or criminal law with retroactive effect ;esp : a law that retroactively alters a defendant's rights esp. by criminalizing and imposing punishment for an act that was not criminal or punishable at the time it was committed, by increasing the severity of a crime from its level at the time the crime was committed, by increasing the punishment for a crime from the punishment imposed at the time the crime was committed, or by taking away from the protections (as evidentiary protection) afforded the defendant by the law as it existed when the act was committed NOTE: Ex post facto laws are prohibited by Article I, Section 9 of the U.S. Constitution. ...
Officiating continuously in a senior post
Officiating continuously in a senior post, the ex-pression 'officiated continuously in a senior post' in Rule 3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules is to be constructed to mean holding a senior post on officiating basis prior to substantive appointment on such senior post. Since a person cannot be treated as officiating on a post after he has been substantively appointed on that post, the said expression cannot be construed as referring to the period of officiation subsequent to the date of substantive appointment, O.S. Singh v. Union of India, (1996) 7 SCC 37 (44). [I.P.S. (Regulation of Seniority) Rules, 1954]...
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