Recognised - Law Dictionary Search Results
Recognition
an admission or an acknowledgement of something existing before. To recognise is to take cognizance of a fact. It implies an
Transfer
Property Act, 1882 but with the rider that s. 128(1) recognises a transfer, even where the instrument of transfer is not
Social democracy
Social democracy, social democracy means 'a way of life which recognise liberty, equality and fraternity as principles of life.' They are
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Sovereignty
and accepted as both divisible and limitable, and we must recognise that it should be so. Sovereignty is limited externally by
Supplicavit
made to the superior courts, they have usually taken the recognisances there, under 21 Jac. 1, c. 8.
Under any customary or personal law applicable to parties
herself. The whole scheme of s. 127(3)(b) is manifestly to recognise the substitute maintenance arrangement by lump sum payment organised by
Market, Court of the Clerk of the
civil property. The object of this jurisdiction was principally the recognisance of weights and measures, to try whether they were according
One eighty day (180-day) rule
person charged with a felony to be released on personal recognisance if the person has been in jail for 180 days
Burden of proof
one in a criminal proceeding. The law does not ordinarily recognise the principle of giving the benefit of doubt to a
Lex loci contractus
to the universal validity of contracts:''No nation is bound to recognise or enforce any contracts injurious to its own interests, or
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Recognised - Law Dictionary Search Results
Recognition
an admission or an acknowledgement of something existing before. To recognise is to take cognizance of a fact. It implies an
Transfer
Property Act, 1882 but with the rider that s. 128(1) recognises a transfer, even where the instrument of transfer is not
Social democracy
Social democracy, social democracy means 'a way of life which recognise liberty, equality and fraternity as principles of life.' They are
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Sovereignty
and accepted as both divisible and limitable, and we must recognise that it should be so. Sovereignty is limited externally by
Supplicavit
made to the superior courts, they have usually taken the recognisances there, under 21 Jac. 1, c. 8.
Under any customary or personal law applicable to parties
herself. The whole scheme of s. 127(3)(b) is manifestly to recognise the substitute maintenance arrangement by lump sum payment organised by
Market, Court of the Clerk of the
civil property. The object of this jurisdiction was principally the recognisance of weights and measures, to try whether they were according
One eighty day (180-day) rule
person charged with a felony to be released on personal recognisance if the person has been in jail for 180 days
Burden of proof
one in a criminal proceeding. The law does not ordinarily recognise the principle of giving the benefit of doubt to a
Lex loci contractus
to the universal validity of contracts:''No nation is bound to recognise or enforce any contracts injurious to its own interests, or
- ‹ Prev
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 13
- 14
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- Last »
Try the research workspace - 7 days free