Movableness - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: movableness Page 1 of about 170 results ( seconds)movable
movable or move·able [mü-və-bəl] adj : capable of being moved or moveable n : an item of movable property ;also : a right or interest (as a chattel mortgage) in an item of movable property [bonds and annuities are incorporeal s] often used in pl. compare immovable ...
Movable property
Movable property, includes growing crops. [Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), s. 2 (13)]It includes standing timber, growing corps and grass, fruit upon and juice in trees, and property of every other description, except immovable property. [Registration Act, 1908 (16 of 1908), s. 2 (9)]The words 'movable property' are intended to include corporal property of every description, except land and things attached to the earth or permanently fastened to anything which is attached to the earth. [Penal Code, 1860 s. 22]Movable property shall mean property of every description, except immovable property. [General Clauses Act, 1897 (10 of 1897), s. 3(36)]...
Specific movable property
Specific movable property, the words specific movable property' occurring in art. 49 of the Limitation Act can mean only such specific items of movable property in respect of which the plaintiff is entitled to claim immediate possession in specific from the defendant who has either wrongfully taken or is wrongfully withholding them from him, Raghunath Das v. Gokal Chand, AIR 1958 SC 827 (830): (1959) SCR 811....
Movables
Movables, goods, furniture, personalty.--means any movable tangible property, other than the ship, and includes money, valuable securities and other documents. [Marine Insurance Act, 1963 (11 of 1963), s. 2(f)]...
movable property
movable property see property ...
Movable
Capable of being moved lifted carried drawn turned or conveyed or in any way made to change place or posture susceptible of motion not fixed or stationary as a movable steam engine...
Movably
In a movable manner or condition...
Heirship movables
Heirship movables, those things which the law withholds from the executors and next of kin, and gives to the heir, that he may not succeed to a house and lands completely dismantled. They consist of the best of everything-furniture, horses, cows, oxen, farming utensils, etc., but do not include fungibles, Scots Law...
Goods
Goods, Computer programs are the product of an intellectual process, but once implanted in a medium they are widely distributed to computer owners. An analogy can be drawn to a compact-disc recording of an orchestral rendition. The music is produced by the artistry of musicians and in itself is not a 'good', but when transferred to a laser-readable disc it becomes a readily merchant-able commodity. Similarly, when a professor deliv-ers a lecture, it is not a good, but, when transcribed as a book, it becomes a good. That a computer program may be copyrightable as intellectual property does not alter the fact that once in the form of a floppy disc or other medium, the program is tangible, moveable and available in the marketplace. The fact that some programs may be tailored for specific purposes need not alter their status as 'goods' because the Code definition includes 'specially manufactured goods', Advent Systems Ltd. v. Unisys Corpn., 925 F. 2d 670 3dCir 1991. Associated Cement Compa...
Property
Property, an actionable claim against the tenants is undoubtedly a species of property which is assignable, State of Bihar v. Kameshwar Singh, AIR 1952 SC 252.Comprises every form of tangible property, even intangible, including debts and chooses in action such as unpaid accumulation of wages, pension, cash grants, and constitutionally protected privy purse, See M.M. Pathak v. Union of India, AIR 1978 SC 802.Decree is to be treated as property, Associated Hotels of India v. Jodha Mal Kuthiala, AIR 1950 Punj 201.Every movable property is included in the ordinary connotation of the word 'property', Chunni Lal v. State, AIR 1968 Raj 70.In commercial law this may carry its ordinary meaning of the subject-matter of ownership. But elsewhere, as in the sale of goods it may be used as a synonym for ownership and lesser rights in goods, Dictionary of Commercial Law by A.H. Hudson, (1983, Edn.).In Entry 42, List III (Constitution of India) includes the power to legislate for acquisition of an un...
- << Prev.
- Next >>