Performing Right - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: performing right Page: 5Feu
A free and gratuitous right to lands made to one for service to be performed by him a tenure where the vassal in place of military services makes a return in grain or in money...
Employee
Employee, includes not only persons employed directly by the employer but also persons employed through a contractor. Moreover, they include not only persons employed in the factory but also persons employed in connection with the work of the factory, P.M. Patel and Sons v. Union of India, (1986) 1 SCC 32: AIR 1987 SC 447: (1985) Supp 3 SCR 55.A person who works in the service of another person (the employer) under an express or implied contract of hire under which the employer has the right to control the details of work performance, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 543.Means a person appointed to or borne on thecadre of staff of the Corporation, other thanperson on deputation. [Employees' State Insurance Corporation (General Provident Fund) Rules, 1995, s. 2(1)(e)]Means any person appointed by the University and includes teachers and other staff of the University, Manipur University Act, 2005, s. 2(k).In relation to the University, means a person other than a teacher or an office...
C'sarian operation
C'sarian operation [fr. C'sar, or rather C'so, the first of that name, who was cut out of his mother's womb], a surgical operation whereby the f'tus is taken from the mother, with a view to save the lives of both or either of them. Consult Tayl. Med. Jur.If this operation be performed after the mother's death, the husband cannot be tenant by the curtesy; since his right begins from the birth of the issue, and is consummated by the death of the wife; but if mother and child are saved, then the husband would be entitled after her death....
Claims Court of
Claims Court of. A court appointed by the sovereign before a coronation to consider and determine the rights of claimants to perform divers services to the sovereign threat (as to carry the spurs) in regard of their tenure of divers lands. See the Report of the Court before the Coronation of his late Majesty King Edward the Seventh, by G. Woods Wollaston, Principal Garter King of arms of the Inner Temple, published by Harrison & Sons in 1903 (p. 330), and note in regard to the Coronation of King George the Fifth in 1911 in Halsb. Laws of Eng. Hailsham Ed., Vol. 6, p. 403. The first Court of Claims was appointed in 1377....
Assignee, or Assign
Assignee, or Assign, a person appointed by another to do any act or perform any business; also a person who takes some right, title, or interest in things by an assignment from an assignor. They are divided into: (1) assignees by deed, as when a lessee of a term assigns it to another; and (2) assignees by law, as when property devolves upon an executor merely in virtue of his appointment as such. Assignees in bankruptcy (now called trustees, see BANKRUPTCY) are those persons in whom the property of a bankrupt vests by virtue of their appointment. (3) includes an assignee of the assignee and the legal representative of a deceased assignee and references to the assignee of any person include references to the assignee of the legal representative or assignee of that person. [Patents Act, 1970 (39 of 1970), s. 2 (1) (ab)]...
VerbarSalam
A salutation or compliment of ceremony in the east by word or act an obeisance performed by bowing very low and placing the right palm on the forehead...
forfeiture
forfeiture 1 : the loss of a right, money, or esp. property because of one's criminal act, default, or failure or neglect to perform a duty compare waiver 2 : something (as money or property) that is forfeited as a penalty ...
expectancy
expectancy pl: -cies : something expected: as a : an interest held by a person who may receive something (as a bequest) in the future but has no enforceable right to it b : the benefit that will be received from a contract if performed ...
Suspend
Suspend, is to debar, usually for a time, from the exercise of a function, to interdict, to stay. It means temporarily staying the execution of the order or of a function, Sajja v. Habib Rather, (1979) Cal LR (J&K) 28.Suspend, to forbid an attorney or solicitor or ecclesiastical person from practising for an interval of time.1. To interrupt; postpone; defer 2. To temporarily keep a person from performing a function, occupying an office, holding a job or exercising a right or privilege, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1460....
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