Hereinafter - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: hereinafterHereinafter referred to
Hereinafter referred to, the word 'hereinafter' referred to as the last date of the publication of the notification is the date from which the prevailing prices of the land is to be computed, Krishi Utpadan Mandi Samiti v. Marband Singh, (1999) 2 SCC 497 (499). [Land Acquisition Act, 1894, s. 6(1) Proviso]...
Advance
Advance [fr. avancer, Fr., to push forwards, fr. avant, Fr., avante, It., ab ante, Lat.], money paid before it is due 'a loan; increase.Advance means an advance, whether in cash or in kind, or party in cash or partly in kind, made by one person (hereinafter referred to as the creditor) to another person (hereinafter referred to as the debtor). [Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976, (19 of 1976), s. 2(a)]...
Hereinafter
In the following part of this writing document speech and the like...
Dangerous place
Dangerous place. S. 30 of the (English) Public Health Acts Amendment Act, 1907 (7 Edw. 7, c. 53), provides as follows:-30. With respect of the repairing or enclosing of dangerous places the following provisions shall have effect (namely):-(1) If in any situation fronting, adjoining, or abutting on any street or public footpath, any building, wall, fence, steps, structure or other thing, or any well, excavation, reservoir, pond, stream, dam or bank is, for want of sufficient repair, protection, or enclosure, dangerous to the persons lawfully using the street or footpath, the local authority may, by notice in writing served upon the owner, require him, within the period specified in the notice and hereinafter in this s. referred to as the 'prescribed period,' to repair, remove, protect, or enclose the same so as to prevent any danger therefrom:(2) If, after service of the notice on the owner, he shall neglect to comply with the requirements thereof within the prescribed period, the local...
Enactment
Enactment, The word 'enactment' does not mean the same thing as 'Act'. Act means the whole Act, whereas a s. or part of a s. may be an enactment, Prabodh Verma v. State of Uttar Pradesh, (1984) 4 SCC 251: AIR 1985 SC 167: (1985) 1 SCR 216.An 'enactment' would include any Act or provision contained therein passed by the Union Parliament or the State Legislature, State of Punjab v. Sukh Deb Sorup Gupta, AIR 1970 SC 1641 (1642). [General Clauses Act, (10 of 1897), s. 3(19)]Enactment shall include a Regulation (as hereinafter defined) and any Regulation of the Bengal, Madras or Bombay Code, and shall also include any provision contained in any Act or in any such Regulation as aforesaid. [General Clause Act, 1897, s. 3(17)]The action or process of making into law, Black's Law Dictionary, p. 546....
Entitled to act
Entitled to act, the following persons shall be deemed persons as and to the extent hereinafter provided (that is to say):-Provided that--(i) no person shall be deemed 'entitled to act' whose interests in the subject-matter shall be shown to the satisfaction of the Collector or Court to be adverse to the interest of the person interested for whom he would otherwise be entitled to act.(ii) in every such case the person interested may appear by a next friend, or, in default of his appearance by a next friend, the Collector or Court, as the case may be, shall appoint a guardian for the case to act on his behalf in the conduct thereof.(iii) the provisions of Order 32 of the First Schedule to the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 shall, mutatis mutandis, apply in the case of persons interested appearing before a Collector or Court by a next friend, or by a guardian for the case, in proceedings under this Act.(iv) no person 'entitled to act' shall be competent to receive the compensation money p...
Execution of Wills
Execution of Wills. By the (English) Wills Act, 1837 (7 Wm. 4 & 1 Vict. c. 26), s. 9:-No will shall be valid unless it be in writing and executed in manner hereinafter mentioned; (that is to say) it shall be signed at the foot or end thereof by the testator or by some other person in his presence and by his direction, and such signature shall be made or acknowledged by the testator in the presence of two or more witnesses present at the same time, and such witnesses shall attest and shall subscribe the will in the presence of the testator, but no form of attestation clause shall be necessary.The (English) Wills Act Amendment Act, 1852 (15 & 16 Vict. c. 24), contains most elaborate saving allowances for the position of the signature. Thus, the signature of the testator may be placed 'at, or after, or following, or under, or beside, or opposite to, the end of the will'; 'a blank space may intervene between the concluding word of the will and the signature'; the signature may be 'on a sid...
Imprisonment
Imprisonment, 'imprisonment' shall mean imprisonment of either description as defined in theIndian Penal Code. [General Clauses Act, 1897 (10 of 1897), s. 3(27)]The restraint of a person's liberty under the custody of another. It extends in law to confinement not only in a gaol, but in a house, or stocks, or to hold-ing a man in the street, etc.; for in all these cases the person so restrained is said to be a prisoner, so long as he has not his liberty freely to go about his business as at other times, Co. Litt. 253. See FALSE IMPRISONMENT.Imprisonment for Crime.--Any common law mis-demeanour is punishable after conviction on indictment by fine or imprisonment or both, at the discretion of the court. Imprisonment for not more than two years is very frequently authorised, as an alternative to penal servitude, by the (English) Offences against the Person Act, 1861, and other Acts set out in Chitty's Statutes, tit. 'Criminal Law.' As to the right of any person convicted by a Court of Summ...
Judicial separation
Judicial separation, granted either to husband or wife on the ground of adultery, cruelty, rape, sodomy, bestiality, non-compliance with a decree for restitution of conjugal rights, or desertion without cause for two years and upwards [(English) Judicature Act, 1925, s. 185]; also by justices, under the Married Women (Maintenance) Acts, 1895 to 1925, to the wife, on the conviction of the husband of aggravated assault, or on the ground of persistent cruelty, forcing her to live apart from him, or on the ground of his being an habitual drunkard [(English) Licensing Act, 1902,s. 5]; and relief can also be obtained by a husband where the wife is an habitual drunkard (ibid.). Under Maintenance Acts the husband can be ordered to make weekly payments to his wife, which can be enforced by imprisonment [R. v. Richardson, (1909) 2 KB 851], but her judgment creditor cannot obtain equitable execution by the appointment of a receiver of such payments, Paquine v. Snary, (1909) 1 KB 688. See also Sum...
Liability of drawer
Liability of drawer, the drawer of a bill of exchange or cheque is bound, in case of dishonour by the drawee thereof, to compensate the holder, provided due notice of dishonour has been given to, or received by, the drawer as hereinafter provided. (Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 (26 of 1881), s. 30)...
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