Good Friday - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: good fridayGood Friday
Good Friday. The Bills of Exchange Act, 1882, s. 92, consolidating 39 & 40 Geo. 3, c. 42, passed for the better observance of Good Friday, and 7 & 8 Geo. 4, c. 15, provides that Good Friday and Christmas Day are to be excluded as 'non-business days' in cases where the time limited by that Act for doing any act or thing is less than three days; and also, by s. 14, that where the last of the three 'days of grace' (see GRACE DAY OF) falls on Good Friday, a bill of exchange shall be payable on the preceding business day. Good Friday is a holiday in the Courts and offices of the Supreme Court (R.S.C. 1883, Ord. LXIII., r. 4), and is not reckoned in the computation of limited time (less than six days) for the purposes of the Rules, (ibid., Ord. LXIV., r. 2), or of limited time, not exceeding seven days, for the purposes of the Municipal Corporations Act, 1882, by s. 230 of that Act, which also allows acts to be done on the day after Good Friday instead of on Good Friday. Houses where intoxic...
Business day
Business day, For the purposes of the (English) Bills of Exchange Act,1882, s. 92 provides that any day other than (a) Sunday, Good Friday, Christmas Day, (b) a bank holiday, (c) a day appointed by royal proclamation as a public fast or thanksgiving, is a business day.Business day means any day other than a Saturday, a Sunday, Christmas day, Good Friday or a day which is a bank holiday in any part of Great Britain; Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 8(1), 4th Edn., Para 1294, p. 1009....
Days of grace
Days of grace. Time of indulgence granted to an acceptor for the payment of his bill of exchange. It was originally a gratuitous favour (hence the name), but custom has rendered it a legal right.The number of these days varies according to the ancient custom or express law prevailing in each particular country. In the (English) United Kingdom, by the Bills of Exchange Act, 1882 (45 & 46 Vict. c. 61), s. 14, 'where a bill' (i.e., a bill of exchange or promissory note) 'is not payable on demand, the day on which it falls due is determined as follows:-Three days, called days of grace, are, in every case where the bill itself does not otherwise provide, added to the time of payment as fixed by the bill, and the bill is due and payable on the last day of grace,' with a proviso that where the last day of grace falls on Sunday, Christmas Day, or Good Friday, or a public fast or thanksgiving day, the bill is payable on the preceding business day, or on the succeeding business day if the last d...
Holiday, or Holyday
Holiday, or Holyday, a feast day with cessation from labour, as by 5 & 6 Edw. 6, c. 3, all Sundays in the year and also Christmas-day and other days by that Act commanded 'to be kepte holie dayes and none other.'By R.S.C. 1883, Ord. LXIII., r. 6, it is provided that the several offices of the Supreme Court shall be open on every day of the year except Sundays, Good Friday, Monday and Tuesday in Easter-week, Whit Monday, the first Monday in August, Christmas-day and the next following working day, and all days appointed by proclamation to be observed as days of general fast, humiliation, or thanksgiving; and the day appointed to be kept as the King's birthday. See also VACATION.The Bank Holidays Act, 1871 (34 & 35 Vict. c. 17), provides that Easter Monday, the Monday in Whitsun-week, the first Monday in August, and the 26th day of December, if a week day, shall be kept as bank holidays in England and Ireland, and New Year's day, Christmas-day (or, if either be a Sunday, the following da...
Cross bun
A bun or cake marked with a cross of icing and intended to be eaten on Good Friday also called hot cross bun even when not hot...
Easter
An annual church festival commemorating Christs resurrection and occurring on Sunday the second day after Good Friday It corresponds to the pascha or passover of the Jews and most nations still give it this name under the various forms of pascha pasque pacircque or pask...
hot cross bun
A bun or cake marked with a cross of icing and intended to be eaten on Good Friday called also cross bun...
VerbarImproperia
A series of antiphons and responses expressing the sorrowful remonstrance of our Lord with his people sung on the morning of the Good Friday in place of the usual daily Mass of the Roman ritual...
Maundy Thursday
The Thursday in Passion week or next before Good Friday...
Christmas-day
Christmas-day, a festival of the Christian Church observed on the 25th of December, in memory of the birth of Jesus Christ. It is one of the usual quarter-days for the payment of rent and salaries; it is also a day on which the offices of the Supreme Court are closed (R.S.C. 1883, Ord. LXIII., r. 6), and it is not reckoned in the computation of time where less than six days is limited for doing anything by a rule of the Supreme Court (Ord. XLIV., r. 2). With respect to this, and also to the closing of public-houses, it stands in the same position as Good Friday....
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