Money Order - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: money order Page: 5 Page 5 of about 67 results (0.003 seconds)Recognisance
Recognisance, an acknowledgement of a debt owing to the Crown, with a condition to be void if the recognizor shall do some particular act, as if he, or the party for whom he is surety, shall appear at the assizes to prosecute a person, or to come up for judgment when called upon, or shall prosecute an appeal, or shall be of good behaviour, commonly called 'binding over.' As to the power of justices of their own initiative to bind over a person, though no formal charge has been made against him, see R. v. Wilkins, (1907) 2 KB 380. See also R. v. Sandbach, Ex p. Williams, (1935) 2 KB 192, and Summary Jurisdiction Act, 1879 (42 & 43 Vict. c. 49), s. 31,sub-s. 3, as amended by Summary Jurisdiction (Appeals) Act, 1933 (23 & 24 Geo. 5, c. 38), s. 1; and as to the mode of entering into recognizance, see Criminal Justice Administration Act, 1914, s. 24; see also ss. 19-23. For forms of recognizance, see the schedule to the Summary Jurisdiction rules, 1886; also rules 112-115 of the Crown Offic...
Where there has been a review
Where there has been a review, the words 'where there has been a review' in clause 2 of Article 182 must be read with the words 'for the execution of a decree or order' in the 1st column of Article and the fact that there was an appeal from the order dismissing the application under Order IX, rule 9 made in connection with the proceedings under s. 36 of the Money Lenders Act could not give a fresh starting point for limitation under Article 182, clause 2, Bhawanipore Banking Corporation Ltd. v. Gouri Shankar Sharma, AIR 1950 SC 6: (1950) SCR 25. (Limitation Act, 1908, Art. 182)...
Cheque
Cheque, defined. [Act (1 of 1879), s. 3; [Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 (26 of 1881), s. 6:A 'cheque' is a bill of exchange drawn on a specified banker and not expressed to be payable otherwise than on demand and it includes the electronic image of a truncated cheque and a cheque in the electronic form.Explanation 1.--For the purposes of this section, the expression--(a) 'a cheque in the electronic form' means a cheque which contains the exact mirror image of a paper cheque, and is generated, written and signed in a secure system ensuring the minimum safety standards with the use of digital signature (with or without biometrics signature) and asymmetric crypto system;(b) 'a truncated cheque' means a cheque which is truncated during the course of a clearing cycle, either by the clearing house or by the bank whether paying or receiving payment, immediately on generation of an electronic image for transmission, substituting the further physical movement of the cheque in writing.Means a...
invest
invest [Medieval Latin investire, from Latin, to clothe, from in- in + vestis garment] 1 : to install in an office or position 2 a : to furnish with or formally grant power or authority b : to grant someone control or authority over : vest vb [Italian investire to clothe, invest money, from Latin, to clothe] vt 1 : to commit (money) in order to earn a financial return 2 : to make use of for future benefits or advantages vi : to commit funds or purchase something of intrinsic value for future gain : make an investment often used with in [ing in precious metals] in·ves·tor n ...
Promissory Note
Promissory Note, defined in the Bills of Exchange Act, 1882, s. 83, as 'an unconditional promise in writing, made by one person to another, signed, by the maker, engaging to pay on demand, or at a fixed or determinable future time, a sum certain in money to or to the order of a specified person or to bearer.' The note can require payment at a particular place, Josolyne v. Roberts, (1908) 2 KB 349. The person who makes the note is called the 'maker,' and the person to whom it is payable is called the 'payee': when it is negotiated by the indorsement of the payee, he is called the 'indorser,' and the person to whom the note is transferred is called the 'indorsee,' The Bills of Exchange Act, 1882, codifies the law relating to promissory notes, and by s. 89 of that Act all the provisions of the Act (with few exceptions) which relate to bills of exchange relate also to promissory notes. See BILL OF EXCHANGE.Means a promissory note as defined by the Negotiable Instrument Act, 1881. [Indian S...
creditor
creditor : a person to whom a debt is owed ;esp : a person to whom money or goods are due compare debtor, obligor general creditor : a creditor who is not secured by a lien or other security interest called also unsecured creditor judgment creditor : a creditor who has a money judgment entered against the debtor and may enforce the judgment (as by attachment or writ of execution) known creditor : a creditor whose potential claim is known or should be known by a debtor and who is entitled to notice of a corporate dissolution or of a date at which claims will be barred (as in bankruptcy) lien creditor : a creditor who is secured by a lien (as by attachment) secured creditor : a creditor who has a security interest (as a mortgage) unsecured creditor : general creditor in this entry ...
Indian coin
Indian coin, referred. (Penal Code, 1860, s. 230)Indian coin is metal stamped and issued by the authority of the Government of India in order to be so used as money; and metal which has been so stamped and issued shall continue to be Indian coin for the purposes of Chapter XII; notwithstand-ing that it may have ceased to be used as money....
Faro
A gambling game at cards in which all the other players play against the dealer or banker staking their money upon the order in which the cards will lie and be dealt from the pack...
Counter-sign
Counter-sign, the signature of a secretary or other subordinate officer to anywriting signed by the pricnipal or superior to vouch for the authenticity of it; e.g., the order of a towncouncil for payment of money out of the borough fund must be singed by three members of the town council,and counter-signed by the townclerk, by (English) Local Government Act, 1933 (23 & 24 Geo. 5, c. 51), s. 187, replacing (except as to London) Municipal Cor-porations Act, 1882, s. 141.Also the password in response to a military challenge by a sentinel or guard.To 'countersign' means 'to sign opposite to along side of or in addition to another signature 'or' to add one's signature to a document (already signed by another) for authentication or confirmation', M. Duraiswamy v. Murugan Bus Service, 1986 Supp SCC 1: AIR 1986 SC 1980 (1989). [Motor Vehicles Act, (4 of 1939), s. 63(1)]...
Period of not less than
Period of not less than, on the plain reading of the proviso to Rule 1(v), Second Schedule to the Act it is clear that in order to claim benefit of the said provision the borrowed money has to be repaid during the period of more than seven years. The only interpretation which can be given to the expression 'during a period of not less than seven years' is that the said period should go beyond seven years. The reasoning is simple. The period of seven years would not complete till the last 'minute' or even the last 'second' of the said period are counted. In other words till the last minute of the seven years period is completed the period remains less than seven years, C.I.T. v. Braithwaite & Co. Ltd., (1993) 2 SCC 262: (1993) 2 SCR 187....
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