Permissive Intervention - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: permissive interventionpermissive intervention
permissive intervention see intervention ...
permissive
permissive 1 : based on or having permission [ occupancy] [a user of the vehicle] 2 : granting permission or discretion (as to the court) [a statute] 3 : not compulsory: as a : allowed or made under a standard, rule, or provision that permits discretion or an option see also permissive intervention at intervention permissive presumption at presumption compare compulsory b : allowed under modern rules of civil procedure although not arising from the same transaction or occurrence as the one at issue in the original claim [a counterclaim] see also permissive joinder at joinder per·mis·sive·ly adv per·mis·sive·ness n ...
intervention
intervention : the act or an instance of intervening ;specif : the act or procedure by which a third party becomes a party to a pending proceeding between other parties in order to protect his or her own interest in the subject matter of the suit compare impleader, interpleader, joinder NOTE: Intervention developed as a procedure in equity courts. There is some overlap between joinder and intervention because of the merger of law and equity in federal practice. intervention of right : intervention allowed in federal civil procedure when a statute grants an absolute right to intervene or when the applicant claims an interest in the subject of the proceeding that the applicant may be impeded from protecting by the disposition of the proceeding NOTE: Intervention of right will not be granted if the court considers that the applicant's interest is already adequately represented. permissive intervention : intervention allowed in federal civil procedure when a statute grants a condi...
Permission
Permission, 'permission' is a word of wide import and may even survive the death of the person who permits. Manohar Nathusao Samarth v Marotrao AIR 1979 SC 1084 (1088): (1979) 4 SCC 93: (1979) 3 SCR 1078.Permission means factual permission and not given the right to a person as an occupant under s. 5(1)(b) of the Jagirs Abolition Act. Thakoreshri Naharasinghji Dolatsinghji v. State of Gujarat, AIR 1980 SC 59: (1979) 4 SCC 291: (1980) 1 SCR 290. [Bombay Land Revenue Code, s. 40]The word 'permission' is comprehensive enough to include subsequent permission, L.I.C. of India v. Escorts Ltd., AIR 1986 SC 1370: (1986) 1 SCC 264: (1985) Supp 3 SCR 909.The word 'permission is a word of wide import. 'Permission' in s. 21 of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947 means only leave to do some act which but for the leave would be illegal, M/s. Dhanrajamal Gobindram v. Shamji Kalidas and Co., AIR 1961 SC 1285 (1290). (FERA, 1947, s. 21)Permission, includes, subsequent permission, L.L.C. v. Escort...
Intervention
Intervention. A third person not originally a party to a suit, but claiming an interest in the matter, may interpose at any stage of the suit in defence of his own interest, whenever affected either as to person or property. This is called intervention, and was peculiar to the Ecclesiastical and Admiralty Courts. It is now practised in actions or suits in the Probate, Divorce, and Admiralty Division of the High Court. An intervener must take the cause as he finds it at the time of his intervention, and can only do what he might have done had he been a party in the first instance; but the Court may relax this rule under special circumstances.In probate actions, any person not named in the writ may intervene and appear in the action as heretofore on filing an affidavit showing that he is interested in the estate of the deceased [(English) R.S.C., Ord. XII., r. 23]. And in an Admiralty action it rem any person not named in the writ may intervene and appear as heretofore on filing an affid...
intervention of right
intervention of right see intervention ...
Exemption, permission
Exemption, permission, Foreign Exchange Regula-tion Act, uses diverse words like, 'authorise', 'exempt' and 'permission' in different parts. The word 'exempt' shows that a person is put beyond the application of law, while 'permission' shows that he is granted leave to act in a particular way. But the word 'permission' is a word of wide import. 'Permission' in this s. means only leave to do some act which but for the leave would be illegal. In this sense, exemption is just one way of giving leave, Dharrajamal Gobindram v. Sharmji Kalidas, AIR 1961 SC 1285 (1290). [Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, (7 of 1947), ss. 21, 5]...
Permissible area
Permissible area, in relation to a land-owner or a tenant, means thirty standard acres and where such thirty standard acres on being converted into ordinary acres exceeds sixty acres such sixty acres. Provided that (i) ... (ii) for a displaced person - (a) who has been allotted land in excess of fifty standard acres, the permissible area shall be fifty standard acres or one hundred acres, as the case may be; (b) who has been allotted land in excess of thirty standard acres, but less than fifty standard acres, the permissible area shall be equal to his allotted area; (c) who has been allotted land less than thirty standard acres the permissible area shall be thirty standard acres, including any other land or part thereof, it any, that he owns in addition. Explanation: For the purposes of determining the permissible area of a displaced person, the provisions of proviso (ii) shall not apply to the heirs and successors of the displaced person to whom land is allotted. Munshi Ram v. Financi...
Approval and permission
Approval and permission, Ordinarily, the difference between approval and permission is that in the first case the action holds good until it is disapproved, while in the other case it does not become effective until permission is obtained. But permission subsequently granted may validate the previous Act, Uttar Pradesh Avas Evam Vikas Parishad v. Friendly Corp. Housing Society Ltd., (1995) Supp (3) SCC 456 (458): AIR 1996 SC 114 (115). [U.P. Urban Planning and Development Act, 1973, s. 59 (1) (a) Exception(iii)]...
permissive inference
permissive inference : permissive presumption at presumption ...
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