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Occasionally - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: occasionally

Occasionality

Quality or state of being occasional occasional occurrence...


Occasional dealer

Occasional dealer, means any person who, in the course of occasional transaction of business nature, whether on his account or on account of a principal or any other person, brings or causes to be brought into a local area any goods or take delivery of goods on its entry into local area. [The Rajasthan Tax on Entry of Goods Into Local Areas Act, 1999, s. 2(k)]...


Occasional or casual visit

Occasional or casual visit, occasional or casual visits mean visits which are not regular, which take place at uncertain intervals and not for a specific or certain object connected with the assessees' regular plan of life, Shamnath Mushram v. Commissioner of Income-tax, AIR 1950 All 612. [Income Tax Act, s. 4A(a)(iii)]. Abdul Kader v. Income Tax Commissioner, AIR 1950 Mad 715...


Occasional

Occuring at times but not constant regular or systematic made or happening as opportunity requires or admits casual incidental as occasional remarks or efforts...


Occasionalism

The system of occasional causes a name given to certain theories of the Cartesian school of philosophers as to the intervention of the First Cause by which they account for the apparent reciprocal action of the soul and the body...


Occasionally

In an occasional manner on occasion at times as convenience requires or opportunity offers not regularly...


Occasiones

Occasiones, assarts. See ASSART....


jury

jury pl: ju·ries [Anglo-French juree, from feminine past participle of Old French jurer to swear, from Latin jurare, from jur- jus law] : a body of individuals sworn to give a decision on some matter submitted to them ;esp : a body of individuals selected and sworn to inquire into a question of fact and to give their verdict according to the evidence occasionally used with a pl. verb [the are always to decide whether the inference shall be drawn "Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr."] see also advisory jury, array, grand jury, inquest, jury nullification, petit jury, special jury, trial jury, venire Amendment VI to the Constitution in the back matter NOTE: The jury of American and English law most likely originated in early Anglo-Norman property proceedings, where a body of 12 knights or freemen who were from the area, and usually familiar with the parties, would take an oath and answer questions put to them by a judge in order to determine property rights. Jury verdicts began to be us...


casual

casual 1 a : not expected or foreseen b : not done purposefully : accidental 2 a : employed for irregular periods [a worker] b : engaging in an activity on an occasional basis [a seller] ...


house of detention

house of detention :a place where prisoners and occasionally witnesses are detained pending a trial compare house of correction, jail, lockup, penitentiary, prison ...


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