Re Employed - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: re employedRe-employment
Re-employment, means retention in service, con-tinued employment in the service in which an employee has been serving is quite a different thing from re-employment of an employee after he has retired. Consequently, a decision not to re-employ is very different from a decision not to retain, Basantkumar Pal v. Chief Electrical Engineer, AIR 1958 Cal 657....
Re-employed
Re-employed, the expression 're-employed', if construed in the light of the object behind the Rule and facts of this case, would also include first regular appointment in the service, Union of India v. Rekha Majhi, AIR 2000 SC 1562 (1564). [Railway Service (Pension) Rules, (1993). R. 21(ii)]Re-employed, would also include first regular appointment in the service on compassionate grounds, Union of India v. Rekha Majhi, AIR 2000 SC 1562. [See Railway Service (Pension) Rules, 1993, R. 21(ii)]...
Recruited direct
Recruited direct, a person is said to be 'Recruited Direct' to a post, category or class in a service, in case his first appointment thereto is made other-wise than (i) by promotion (ii) by transfer or (iii) by re-employment, G.S. Venkat Reddy v. Government of Andhra Pradesh, AIR 1993 SC 2306 (2312): 1993 Supp (3) SCC 425. [Andhra Pradesh State andSubordinate Services Rules, R. 22(e) & 3(14)]...
Domestics
Domestics, menial servants (so called from being intra m'nia domus, within the walls of a house). The contract between them and their masters arises upon the hiring. In this country it is usual to engage domestic servants at a fixed amount of wages per annum. But there is generally no express stipulation as to the time that the service is to last; and when the terms are not otherwise defined the contract is thus understood that either party may determine the service at pleasure, upon a month's warning or upon payment of a month's wages. As to the persons entitled under a bequest to 'domestic servants,' see Re Lawson, (1914) 1 Ch 682; Re Jackson, 39 TLR 400. See MASTER AND SERVANT.For the purposes of Unemployment Insurance, employment in domestic service, except where the employed in any trade or business carried on for the purpose of gain, is an excepted employment under the (English) Unemployment Insurance Acts, 1935 and 1936 (25 & 26 Geo. 5, c. 8) and (26 Geo. 5 & 1 Edw. 8, c. 13). H...
Commercial establishment
Commercial establishment, in the definition of a Commercial Establishment in s. 2 cl. 3 of the U.P. Shops and Commercial Eastblishment Act, 1947, the clerical and other establishments of a factory to whom the provisions of the Factories Act, 1934, do not apply, are included in the connotation of that expression. It is true that the reference in the definition by which clerical and other establish-ments of factories are included is to the Factories Act of 1934, but by virtue of s. 8 of the General Clauses (1987 10 of 1897), it must be construed as a reference to the provisions of the Factories Act LXIII of 1948 which repealed the Factories Act of 1934 and re-enacted it. It is difficult to say that field workers who are employed in guiding, supervising and controlling the growth and supply of sugarcane to be used in the factory are employed either in the precincts of the factory or in the premises of the factory; and if these workers are not employed in a factory, the provisions of the F...
preclude
preclude pre·clud·ed pre·clud·ing : to prevent or exclude by necessary consequence [the requirement of a marriage ceremony s the creation of common-law marriages in this jurisdiction]: as a : to prevent (a party) from litigating an action or claim esp. by collateral estoppel or res judicata [they are precluded only because they failed to assert…the grounds for recovery they now assert "Roach v. Teamsters Local Union No. 688, 595 F.2d 446 (1979)"] b : to prevent (a claim or action) from being litigated esp. by collateral estoppel or res judicata [the Civil Service Reform Act provides the exclusive address for adverse federal employment actions and thus s claims brought under the Tort Claims Act "National Law Journal"] pre·clu·sion [-klü-zhən] n pre·clu·sive [-klü-siv] adj ...
Labourer
Labourer, according to the dictionary meaning, this indicates a person who is engaged in the performance of unskilled labour, generally speaking. A person who is called upon to do some work which requires some amount of skill, however little that may be, is not to be regarded as a labourer, G. Venkatachalam Pillai v. Labour and Co. (Pte.) Ltd., AIR 1961 Mad 358 (359). [Limitation Act, 1908, Art. 7]Means servants in husbandry or manufactures, not living intra m'nia. Various repealed Acts of (English) Parliament (see, e.g., 5 Eliz. c. 4) have vested in the justices of the peace the power of com-pelling persons not having any visible livelihood to go out to service in husbandry, or in certain specific trades, for the promotion of honest industry. A 'labourer' is a man who digs and does other work of that kind with his hands (per Brett, M.R., Morgan v. London General Omnibus Co., (1884) 53 LJQB 352); but a farmer is not a labourer within the Sunday Observance Act, 1677 (29 Car. 2, c. 7) [R...
agent
agent 1 : someone or something that acts or exerts power : a moving force in achieving some result 2 : a person guided or instigated by another in some action [where the heads of departments are the political…s of the executive, merely to execute the will of the president "Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137 (1803)"] see also innocent agent 3 a : a person or entity (as an employee or independent contractor) authorized to act on behalf of and under the control of another in dealing with third parties see also agency, fiduciary relationship, subagent compare fiduciary, principal, servant apparent agent : an agent acting under an agency by estoppel bar·gain·ing agent : a labor union that represents the employees in a bargaining unit in negotiating with their employer through collective bargaining business agent : an agent that handles business affairs for another person or organization ;esp : a paid official of a union who carries on union business between the employ...
Further assurance, Covenant for
Further assurance, Covenant for, one of the usual covenants entered into by a vendor for the protection of the vendee's interest in the subject of purchase, to the effect that the vendor will, at the request and cost of the vendee, execute further conveyances, etc., for more perfectly assuring the subject-matter of the conveyance; implied in conveyances made on or after Jan. 1st, 1882, expressed to be made by a 'beneficial owner,' or if other terms of art are employed, according to the case by the Law of Property Act, 1925, s. 76, and the Second Schedule re-enacting and extending s. 7 of the Conveyancing Act, 1881...
Recession
Recession, a re-grant.A period charaterized by a sharp slowdown an economic activity declining employment and a decrease in investment and consumer spending, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn....
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