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Alnet, De

the People Act, 1918, provides that a person shall not be disqualified from voting at a parliamentary or local government election because he or his dependants have received poor relief or other alms

Borough

of the Interpretation Act, 1889) in every Act passed in or after 1890 when used in relation to local government, a town incorporated for the purposes of internal government, and subject to the (English) Municipal Corporations Act,

Audi alteram partem

reason for the Common Law supplying the omission in a statute to direct a hearing, Hopkins v. Smethwick Local Board, (1890) 24 QBD 712; Broom's Leg. Max. Similarly, Qui aliquid statuerit parte inaudita altera, 'quum licet dixerit,

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Borne by the owner

in the proviso to s. 23(1) of the Act, i.e., the liability to pay tax imposed by the local authority which the owner is liable to discharge and not the actual sum paid by him in discharge

Bedford level

to the privileges conferred by the act on the owners of lands within the Level. See also (English) Local Acts and 4 Geo. 4, c. 46.

Baths and washhouses

Baths and washhouses. The (English) Public Health Act, 1936, ss. 231-234, enables local authorities to provide public baths, wash-houses and bathing places, and make bye-laws for these if under their management;

Bathing, sea

B & Ald 268, followed by the Court of Appeal in Brinckman v. Matley, (1904) 2 Ch 313. Local authorities may make regulations as to bathing by virtue of ss. 231-234 of the Public Health Act, 1936.

Barbed-wire

it, means barbed wire which may probably be injurious to persons or animals lawfully using such highway. A local authority can require the removal of barbed wire adjoining a highway when it thus constitutes a nuisance; but

Away-going, or Way-going crops

of the contact, but, where that is not the case, he is generally entitled to do so by local custom or usage; such custom or usage has been held to be reasonable and valid, see Wigglesworth v.

Aumeen

the charge of a country on the removal of a zemindar, or for any other particular purpose of local investigation of arrangement, Indian.

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Localized - 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.

Alnet, De

the People Act, 1918, provides that a person shall not be disqualified from voting at a parliamentary or local government election because he or his dependants have received poor relief or other alms

Borough

of the Interpretation Act, 1889) in every Act passed in or after 1890 when used in relation to local government, a town incorporated for the purposes of internal government, and subject to the (English) Municipal Corporations Act,

Audi alteram partem

reason for the Common Law supplying the omission in a statute to direct a hearing, Hopkins v. Smethwick Local Board, (1890) 24 QBD 712; Broom's Leg. Max. Similarly, Qui aliquid statuerit parte inaudita altera, 'quum licet dixerit,

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Borne by the owner

in the proviso to s. 23(1) of the Act, i.e., the liability to pay tax imposed by the local authority which the owner is liable to discharge and not the actual sum paid by him in discharge

Bedford level

to the privileges conferred by the act on the owners of lands within the Level. See also (English) Local Acts and 4 Geo. 4, c. 46.

Baths and washhouses

Baths and washhouses. The (English) Public Health Act, 1936, ss. 231-234, enables local authorities to provide public baths, wash-houses and bathing places, and make bye-laws for these if under their management;

Bathing, sea

B & Ald 268, followed by the Court of Appeal in Brinckman v. Matley, (1904) 2 Ch 313. Local authorities may make regulations as to bathing by virtue of ss. 231-234 of the Public Health Act, 1936.

Barbed-wire

it, means barbed wire which may probably be injurious to persons or animals lawfully using such highway. A local authority can require the removal of barbed wire adjoining a highway when it thus constitutes a nuisance; but

Away-going, or Way-going crops

of the contact, but, where that is not the case, he is generally entitled to do so by local custom or usage; such custom or usage has been held to be reasonable and valid, see Wigglesworth v.

Aumeen

the charge of a country on the removal of a zemindar, or for any other particular purpose of local investigation of arrangement, Indian.

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