Map Maker - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: map makermap maker
A person who makes maps a cartographer...
Existing land use map
Existing land use map, a map indicating the use to which lands in any specified area are put at the time of preparing the map and includes the register prepared, with the map giving details of land use. [M.P. Motoryan Sanshodhan Adhiniyam, 2004, s. 2(i)]...
co-maker
co-maker : one of two or more persons who sign an instrument to indicate a promise to pay a financial obligation NOTE: Any co-maker may be sued for the entire amount of the indebtedness, although a co-maker who is forced to pay more than his or her share may seek contribution from the other co-makers. ...
Village map
Village map, denotes khasra is often spoken as 'village map', Jangbir v. Mahavir Prasad Gupta, (1976) 4 SCC 682....
Maker and drawer
Maker and drawer, a clear distinction appears to have been made between 'maker' and 'drawer', the former word being used in a more general sense as applying to promissory notes, negotiable instru-ments and cheques, while the word 'drawer' is restricted to bills of exchange or cheques only, and is nowhere used in connection with promissory notes, Firm Sheikh Mohammad Ismail Maula Bakhsh v. Mian Abdul Majid Khan, AIR 1937 Lah 259....
Map
Map. A graphic delineation of territory. See ORDNANCE SURVEY; PLAN....
maker
maker : one (as an issuer) that undertakes to pay a negotiable instrument and esp. a note [sign a note as rather than indorser] ...
Maker
Maker, the person who signs a promissory note; by making it he 'engages that he will pay it according to its tenour, and is precluded from denying to a holder in due course the existence of the payee and his than capacity to endorse.'-Bills of Exchange Act, 1882, s. 88....
Parcel makers
Parcel makers, two officers in the Exchequer who formerly made the parcels of the escheators' accounts, wherein they charged them with everything they had levied for the sovereign's use within the time of their being in office, and delivered the same to the auditors to make up their accounts therewith, Prac. Exch....
Ordnance survey
Ordnance survey. The 'survey of Great Britain and the Isle of Man' was first authorized in 1841 by 4 & 5 Vict. c. 30, an Act which expired in 1846, but was continued by successive Expiring Laws Continuance Acts until made permanent by 12 & 13 Geo. 5, c. 50. The work is carried out under the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries Acts, 1889 to 1919.For statutory determination of distance by ordnance map, see Municipal Corporations Act, 1882, s. 231, and for definition of 'ordnance map, see Interpre-tation Act, 1889, s. 25. For the use of the Ordnance Survey Maps in the Land Registry, see Land Registration Act, 1925, s. 76, and Tratman, 'The Land Registry General Map.'...
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