Invalidate - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: invalidateinvalidate
invalidate : to make or declare invalid [the high court invalidating the statute] in·val·i·da·tion [in-va-lə-dā-shən] n ...
Invalidate
To render invalid to weaken or lessen the force of to destroy the authority of to render of no force or effect to overthrow as to invalidate an agreement or argument...
Or is otherwise invalid
Or is otherwise invalid, the words 'or is otherwise invalid' in clause (c) of s. 30 are wide enough to cover all forms of invalidity including invalidity of the reference, Union of India v. Om Prakash, (1976) 4 SCC 32: AIR 1976 SC 1745 (1749). [Arbitration Act, 1940 s. 30(c)...
Invalidness
Invalidity as the invalidness of reasoning...
invalidity
invalidity : lack of validity : state of being invalid ...
Invalid carriage
Invalid carriage, means a motor vehicle specially designed and constructed, and not merely adapted, for the use of a person suffering from some physical defect or disability, and used solely by or for such a person. [Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (59 of 1988), s. 2 (18)]...
Invalidism
The condition of an invalid sickness infirmity...
Invalidation
The act of inavlidating or the state of being invalidated...
invalid
invalid : being without force or effect under the law [declared the will ] in·val·id·ly adv ...
Void
Void, 'the erosion of the distinction between juris-dictional errors and non-jurisdictional errors has, correspondingly eroded the distinction between void and voidable decision. The courts have become increasingly impatient with the distinction, to the extent that (1) All official decisions are presumed to be valid until set aside or otherwise held to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction', Judicial Review of Administrative Action, De Smith, Woolf and Jowell, 1995 Edn., p. 259-60.Void, denotes 'if an act or decision, or an order or other instrument is invalid, it should, in principal be null and void for all purposes; and it has been said that there are no degrees of nullity. Even though such an act is wrong and lacking in jurisdiction, however, it subsists and remains fullyeffective unless and until it is set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction. Until its validity is challenged, its legality is preserved', Halsbury's Laws of England, 4th Edn., (Re-issue), Vol. 1(1), ...
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