Implicate - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: implicateimplication
implication 1 : the act of implicating : the state of being implicated 2 : the act of implying : the state of being implied 3 : something implied ...
Implication
Implication, a necessary or presumable inference, not directly declared, arising out of acts or words in evidence (see Jarman or Theobald on Wills). Many implications are statutory. See, e.g., Sale of Goods Act, 1893, the terms implied in a contact for work and labour, and materials supplied are the same as upon a sale of goods under s. 14 of the (English) Sale of Goods Act, 1893 [Myers & Co. v. Brent Cross Service Co., (1934) 1 KB 46]; (English) Law of Property Act, 1925 (implied covenants). An implication may be removed by express words supplying the agreed meaning which would otherwise have been left to inference. See the maxim: EXPRESSIO UNIUS EST EXCLUSIO ALTERIUS.Means (1) the act of showing involvement in some-thing, esp., a crime or misfeasance (2) An inference drawn from something said or observed, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 757....
Implication
The act of implicating or the state of being implicated...
easement by implication
easement by implication see easement ...
implicate
implicate -cat·ed -cat·ing : to involve as a consequence, corollary, or natural inference [firing the federal employee because of her protest s the First Amendment] ...
implicating
a charge that implicates someone usually of wrongdoing...
Implicative
Tending to implicate...
Implicatively
By implication...
Entrustment
Entrustment, means 'the transfer of possession of goods to a merchant who deals in goods of that type and who may in turn transfer the goods and all rights to them to a purchaser in the ordinary course of business' (Black's Law Dictionary), see also National Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Ishar Das Madan Lal, (2007) 4 SCC 105.The expression 'entrustment' carries with it the implication that the person handing over any property or on whose behalf that property is handed over to another, continues to be its owner. Entrustment is not necessarily a term of law. It may have different implications in different contexts. In its most general significance, all its imports is handing over the possession for some purpose which may not imply the conferment of any propriety right therein. The ownership or beneficial interest in the property in respect of which criminal breach of trust is alleged to have been committed, must be in some person other than the accused and the latter must hold it on account of s...
Easement
Easement, An easement is a right which the owner or occupier of certain land possesses, a such, for the beneficial enjoyment of that land, to do and continue to do something, or to prevent and continue to prevent something being done, in or upon, or in respect of, certain other land not his own. [Easement Act, 1882 (5 of 1882), s. 4]Easement, a privilege without profit which the owner of one neighbouring tenement hath of another, existing in respect of their several tenements, by which the owner of the one (called the servient) tenement is obliged to suffer, or not to do something on his own land, for the advantage of the owner of the other (called the dominant) tenement, e.g., a right of way, a right of passage of water. It is the servitus of the Civil Law. An easement being a mere right without profit must be distinguished from a profit a prendre (q.v.), which confers a right to take something from the servient tenement. Instances of easements are rights of way, light, support, or fl...
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