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Lords of Appeal in Ordinary

Lords of Appeal in Ordinary, originally two persons having held high judicial office, or practised at the bar for not less than fifteen years, appointed, with a salary of 6,000l. a year, to aid the House of Lords and the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in the hearing of appeals (App. Jur. Act, 1876, s. 6). On the death or resignation of any two members of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council the Crown was empowered to appoint a third and fourth Lord of Appeal in Ordinary (ibid., s. 14), and may now appoint two more in addition to the four (App. Jur. Act, 1913, s. 1), and a further one in addition to the six (App. Jur. Act, 1929, s. 2). Any Lord of Appeal in Ordinary who at the date of his appointment would have been qualified to the appointed an ordinary judge of the Court of Appeal, or at that date was a judge of that Court, is an ex-officio judge of the Court of Appeal (Jud. Act, 1925, s. 6 (2)). Lords of Appeal in Ordinary rank as barons for life and sit and vote in t...


buyer in ordinary course of business

buyer in ordinary course of business :a bona fide purchaser who in a normal or regular business procedure buys goods from a seller in the business of selling goods of that kind NOTE: Under the Uniform Commercial Code a buyer in ordinary course of business takes the purchased goods free of the property interests of a third party. The consideration exchanged for the goods is restricted to cash, other property, or credit. The purchase also cannot be a transfer in bulk or serve as security for or satisfaction of a debt. Pawnbrokers are specifically excluded from qualifying as buyers in ordinary course of business. ...


ordinary course of business

ordinary course of business :the usual manner and range of a business esp. considered in relation to the amount, circumstances, and validity of a particular transfer [the bankruptcy trustee voided a transfer that was not in the ordinary course of business] see also buyer in ordinary course of business ...


ordinary and necessary business expense

ordinary and necessary business expense : ordinary and necessary expense at expense ...


Buyer-in-ordinary course of business

Buyer-in-ordinary course of business, means a bona fide purchaser who in a normal or regular business procedure buys goods from a seller in the business of selling goods of that kind. Under the uniform commercial Code a buyer in a ordinary course of business takes the purchased goods free of the property interests of a third party. The consideration exchanged for the goods is restricted to cash, other property, or credit. The purchase also cannot be a transfer in bulk or serve as security for or satisfaction of a debt, Webster's Dictionary of Law, Indian Edn. (2005), p. 62....


Double the ordinary rate of wages

Double the ordinary rate of wages, by using the phrase 'double the ordinary rate of wages' the rule-making authority seems to us to have intended that the worker should be the recipient of double the remuneration which he, in fact, ordinarily receives and not double the rate of minimum wages fixed for him under the Act, Y.A momarde v. Authority, AIR 1972 SC 1721 (1726). [Madhya Pradesh Minimum Wages Rules (1951), s. 25(1)(b)]...


Ordinary

Ordinary, a judge who has authority to take cog-nizance of causes in his own right, and not by deputation or delegation, Civ. Law. See NOTARY.By the Common Law, one who has exempt and immediate jurisdiction in causes ecclesiastical.Also, a bishop: and an archbishop is the ordinary of the whole province, to visit and receive appeals from inferior jurisdictions. Also, a commissary or official of a bishop or other ecclesiastical judge having judicial power; an archdeacon; officer of the royal household....


Ordinary of newgate

Ordinary of newgate, the clergyman who is attendant upon condemned malefactors in that prison to prepare them for death; he records the behaviour of such persons. Formerly, it was the custom of the ordinary to publish a small pamphlet upon the execution of any remarkable criminal....


Ordinary rate of wages

Ordinary rate of wages, the word 'ordinary' used in Rule 25 reflects the actuality rather than the worker's minimum entitlement under the Act, Y.A. Mamarade v. Authority, AIR 1972 SC 1721 (1726): (1972) 2 SCC 108. [Minimum Wages Central Rules, 1960, Rules 25(1)]...


ordinary

ordinary : of a kind to be expected from the average person or in the normal course of events ;broadly : of a common kind or degree [an proceeding] compare extraordinary ...


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