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Impute - Law Dictionary Search Results

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joint enterprise

(as of a vehicle) NOTE: In regard to a tort involving such an enterprise, a third party may impute negligence of one party (as a driver) to another in the enterprise.

Proper law of a contract

it can be drawn, their intention as such has no relevance. It that event, the courts endeavour to impute an intention by identifying the legal system with which the transaction has its closest and most real connection,

Prostitute

sending of children associating with prostitutes to approved schools, etc., see (English) Children Act, 1933, s. 62. Words imputing that a woman or girl is a prostitute are actionable without proof of special damage; see the Slander

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Criminal Evidence Act

prove his own good character 'or the nature or conduct of the defence is such as to involve imputations' [see R. v. Rouse, (1904) 1 KB 184; R. v. Bridgwater, (1905) 1 KB 131; R. v. Preston,

Further advance, or charge

the further advance to that charge but (by way of exception) in this case notice will not be imputed to the mortgagee by the registration of the subsequent charge as a land charge or in a local

Notice

which he has actual or constructive notice. As to the length of title in which notice will be imputed, see Re Cousins, (1886) 31 CD 671, and the (English) Law of Property Act, 1925, s. 44. By

Post-obit Bond

of a post-obit bond at public auction will not necessarily give it validity, or free it from the imputation of being obtained under the pressure of necessity. See BOND; EXPECTANT HEIR.

Sufficient cause

construction so as to advance substantial justice when no negligence or inaction or want of bona fide is imputable to a party, State of West Bengal v. Administrator, AIR 1972 SC 749: (1972) 1 SCC 366: (1972)

Reasonable and probable cause

the position of the accuser, to the conclusion that the person charged was probably guilty of the crime imputed, Nagendra Kumar v. Etwari Sahu, AIR 1958 Pat 329.

Reflection

Reflection, is a remark or statement imputing discredit or blame to other, Webster American Dictionary, p. 1221. Reflection, reflecting on the proceedings of the House

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Impute - Law Dictionary Search Results

Research workspace

Save terms and build your research trail

A free trial unlocks notes, tags, search history, and the full AI Studio desk for judgment research.

joint enterprise

(as of a vehicle) NOTE: In regard to a tort involving such an enterprise, a third party may impute negligence of one party (as a driver) to another in the enterprise.

Proper law of a contract

it can be drawn, their intention as such has no relevance. It that event, the courts endeavour to impute an intention by identifying the legal system with which the transaction has its closest and most real connection,

Prostitute

sending of children associating with prostitutes to approved schools, etc., see (English) Children Act, 1933, s. 62. Words imputing that a woman or girl is a prostitute are actionable without proof of special damage; see the Slander

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Criminal Evidence Act

prove his own good character 'or the nature or conduct of the defence is such as to involve imputations' [see R. v. Rouse, (1904) 1 KB 184; R. v. Bridgwater, (1905) 1 KB 131; R. v. Preston,

Further advance, or charge

the further advance to that charge but (by way of exception) in this case notice will not be imputed to the mortgagee by the registration of the subsequent charge as a land charge or in a local

Notice

which he has actual or constructive notice. As to the length of title in which notice will be imputed, see Re Cousins, (1886) 31 CD 671, and the (English) Law of Property Act, 1925, s. 44. By

Post-obit Bond

of a post-obit bond at public auction will not necessarily give it validity, or free it from the imputation of being obtained under the pressure of necessity. See BOND; EXPECTANT HEIR.

Sufficient cause

construction so as to advance substantial justice when no negligence or inaction or want of bona fide is imputable to a party, State of West Bengal v. Administrator, AIR 1972 SC 749: (1972) 1 SCC 366: (1972)

Reasonable and probable cause

the position of the accuser, to the conclusion that the person charged was probably guilty of the crime imputed, Nagendra Kumar v. Etwari Sahu, AIR 1958 Pat 329.

Reflection

Reflection, is a remark or statement imputing discredit or blame to other, Webster American Dictionary, p. 1221. Reflection, reflecting on the proceedings of the House

  • Last »

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