Mix Up - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: mix upmix up
To confuse the identities of two or more objects to mistake one object for another as at the family gathering he mixed up his two nieces to their great amusement...
Concerned
Concerned, it is as an adjustive may mean 'interested', 'involved', R. Dalmia v. Commissioner of Income Tax, (1977) 2 SCC 467: AIR 1977 SC 988 (991): (1977) 2 SCR 654. [Income-tax Act (11 of 1922), s. 2(6c)(iii)]The words 'concerned in' mean 'interested in, involved in, mixed up with', Asstt. Collector of Customs v. Sitaram Agarvala, AIR 1966 SC 955: (1966) 2 SCR 1....
Concerned in or dealing with goods
Concerned in or dealing with goods, The words 'concerned in' mean 'interested in, involved in, mixed up with' while the words 'deal with' mean 'to have something to do with, to concern one-self, to treat, to make arrangement, to negotiate with respect to something', Assistant Collector of Customs v. Sitaram Agarwala, AIR 1966 SC 955: (1966) 2 SCR 1. (Customs Act, 1962, ss. 135, 111, 112)...
Imported into
Imported into, words 'imported into' do not merely mean 'bringing into' but comprise something more i.e., incorporating and mixing up of the goods with the mass of the property in the local area, Central India Spinning and Weaving Co. v. Municipal Committee, AIR 1958 SC 341: (1958) SCR 1102....
Mix
To cause a promiscuous interpenetration of the parts of as of two or more substances with each other or of one substance with others to unite or blend into one mass or compound as by stirring together to mingle to blend as to mix flour and salt to mix wines...
Mixed
Formed by mixing united mingled blended See Mix v t amp i...
Question of fact, mixed question of law and fact
Question of fact, mixed question of law and fact, In the determination of question of fact no application of any principle of law is required in finding either the basic facts or arriving to the ultimate con-clusion, in a mixed question of law and fact the ultimate conclusion has to be drawn by applying principles of law to basic findings, Meenakshi Mills, Madurai v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Mardas, AIR 1957 SC 49 followed Krishnawati v. Hans Raj, (1974) 1 SCC 289: AIR 1974 SC 280....
Winding-up
Winding-up, the process by which an insolvent estate is distributed, as far as it will go, amongst the persons having claims upon it. The term is most frequently applied to the winding-up of joint-stock companies.The property of a company is collected and distributed firstly in discharge of its liabilities, and secondly, among its members according to their respective rights with a view to its dissolution. If the assets are not sufficient to meet the liabilities, a company is usually wound up by the Court. In other cases the winding-up is usually voluntary and conducted by the company itself either with or without the supervision of the Court. The provisions of the (English) Companies Act, 1929, govern a winding-up in any of these three modes (s. 156). In any winding-up the members who may be called upon to contribute are ascertained and their liability determined under ss. 157-162; see CONTRIBUTORIES. Debts and claims of all kinds require to be proved and if not of certain value to be...
Voluntary winding up and winding up by the court
Voluntary winding up and winding up by the court, the expressions 'voluntary winding up' and 'winding up by the Court' have acquired a technical meaning in our Company and Insurance jurisprudence. Like the Co-operative Society Laws, the Companies Act and the Insurance Act also make a distinction between the cessation of business by a company and its voluntary winding up or winding up by an order of the Court. There is nothing unequivocal in s. 15(a) of the Act to show that Parliament intended to depart from the technical meaning of 'voluntary winding up' and 'winding up by the Court' and to bid a good-bye to the distinction in our Company and Insurance jurisprudence between mere cessation of business by a company and its voluntary winding up or winding up by an order of the Court. The phrase 'voluntarily wound up' in the first limb would mean the voluntary winding up of an insurance public company in accordance with s. 54 of the Insurance Act, The Neptune Assurance Co. Ltd.v. Union of ...
Mixedly
In a mixed or mingled manner...
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