Skip to content

Lay Corporations - Law Dictionary Search Results

Lay corporations

Lay corporations, bodies politic; they are either: (1) Civil, created for temporal

Eleemosynary corporations

partaking of the nature of ecclesiastical bodies, are, strictly speaking, lay, and not ecclesiastical, even though composed of ecclesiastical persons; and, … Eleemosynary corporations, corporate bodies con-stituted for the perpetual distribution of the free

Condition of service

guarantee provided by Article 311 (1) of the Constitution which lays down that no public servant shall be dismissed by an … it will clearly be ultra vires. Mysore State Road Transport Corporation v. Mirja Khasim Ali Beg, (1977) 2 SCR 282: AIR

Appropriation

is the annexing a benefice to the use of a lay person or corporation. Appropriation may be severed and the church … a benefice to the use of a lay person or corporation. Appropriation may be severed and the church become disappropriate, if

Churchwardens

but though in some sort ecclesiastical officers, they are always lay persons. They are a quasi corporation for certain purpose, Withnell … officers, they are always lay persons. They are a quasi corporation for certain purpose, Withnell v. Gartham, (1795) 6 TR 388

Corporation or body politic

spiritual, created to perpetuate the rights of the Church, or lay'sub-divided into civil, created for many temporal purposes, and eleemosynary, to … such), or by his heirs or assigns. The distinction between corporations and trading partnerships is, that in the first the law

Lay off

Lay off, s. 2(kkk) of Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 defines a … temporarily during the emergency, Nutan Mills v. Employees State Insurance Corporation, AIR 1956 Bom 336 (340). [Employees' State Insurance Act, (34

Unauthorised occupation

pursuance of any allotment, lease or grant. That Act, therefore, lays special stress on only one point, namely, the entry into … is explain-ed in s. 437A of the Bombay Provincial Municipal Corporation Act, 1949 in relation to any person authorised to occupy

Induction

person who inducts takes the hand of the clerk, and lays it on the ring, key, or latch of the church-door, … a clod, turf, or twig of the glebe, and gives corporal possession of the church, saying:-- By virtue of this mandate

Parson

384. Many appropriations, however, are now in the hands of lay persons, who are usually styled, by way of distinction, lay … to say, the benefice is perpetually annexed to some spiritual corporation, either sole or aggregate, being the patron of the living;

  • ‹ Prev
  • Last »

Save Judgments · Add Notes · Store Search Results · Organize Client Files Start your Free Trial