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Relevant Activity - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: relevant activity

Relevant activity

Relevant activity, means--(i) the development, production, handling, opera-tion, maintenance, storage or dissemination of a nuclear, chemical or biological weapon; or(ii) the development, production, maintenance, storage or dissemination of missiles specially designed for delivering any such weapon. [The Weapon of Mass Destruction and their Delivery System (Prohibition of Unlawful Activities) Act, 2005, s. 4(j)]...


Brought in transit

Brought in transit, of means to bring goods from any country into India by land, air, or amphibious means of transportation, where the goods are to be taken out from India on the same conveyance on which they are brought into India without any landing in India, but does not include a conveyance in innocent passage through Indian territory Indian territorial waters or Indian airspace of a foreign conveyance carrying goods.Explanation I.--A conveyance is a foreign conveyance if it is not registered in India.Explanation II.--A conveyance is in 'innocent passage' if it is not engaged in relevant activity and passes through or above Indian territorial waters or airspace without stopping or anchoring in India. [Weapons of Mass Destruction and Their Delivery Systems (Prohibition of Unlawful Activities) Act, 2005 (21 of 2005), s. 4(b)]....


Item

Item [Lat. also], a word used when any article is added to the former.Item, is an entry in an account, Wilson v. First Country Ltd. (CA), (2001) LR 407 (QB).Item, means materials, equipment, and technology, of any description, notified under this Act or any other Act related to relevant activity [Weapons of Mass Destructions and their Delivery System (Prohibition of Unlawful Activities) Act, 2005, s. 4(f)]....


Relevancy and admissibility

Relevancy and admissibility, the expressions 'relevancy and admissibility' are used as synonyms but their legal implications are distinct and different for more often than not facts which are relevant may not be admissible, for example, communication made by spouses during marriage or between an Advocate and his client though relevant are not admissible; so also facts which are admissible may not be relevant, for example, questions permitted to be put in cross-examination to test the veracity or impeach the credit of witnesses, though not relevant are admissible. The probative value of the evidence is the weight to be given to it which has to be judged having regard to the facts and circumstances of each case, Ram Bihari Yadav v. State of Bihar, (1998) 4 SCC 517: AIR 1998 SC 1850 (1852). [Evidence Act, (10 of 1872), s. 3]...


Place

Place, denotes an area within known boundary areas notified to be within two different boundaries cannot be same place, Bajaj Plastic Ltd. v. Collector Central Excise, (1987) 1 Bom LR 566: (1987) Mah LR 681.Place, is not a synonym for country and it is one of the rules of interpretation that surplusages are not used in enactments. The word 'place' definitely connotes a different meaning from the word 'country'. It means that where the product of one town is being described as the product of another town, Dharam Deo Gupta v. State, AIR 1958 All 865.Place, may be a large area; all that is necessary is that the place should be sufficiently so defined that the public is reasonably notified of its extent. There is not much distinction between a place and an area, and so long as it is clearly specified and well-defined in the order, there is no illegality in including an area as large as a district within the scope of an order. The public generally can be subjected to the inhabitation irresp...


Relevancy

Relevancy. In Scots law the relevancy is the justice or sufficiency in law of the allegations of a party. A plea to the relevancy is therefore analogous to the demurrer of the English courts....


Relevant market

Relevant market, means the market which may be determined by the Commission with reference to the relevant product market or the relevant geographic market or with reference to both the markets. [Competition Act, 2002 (12 of 2003), s. 2(r)]...


abnormally dangerous activity

abnormally dangerous activity : an activity esp. that is not common in or appropriate to an area, that creates a high degree of risk of harm to someone or something despite the exercise of due care, and whose value to the community in the area is outweighed by the risk of harm compare ultrahazardous activity NOTE: Abnormally dangerous activities are subject to strict liability. Abnormally dangerous activity and ultrahazardous activity are sometimes used interchangeably. ...


relevance

relevance : the quality or state of being relevant : relation to the matter at hand [ruled on the of the testimony] [ in discovery has been broadly interpreted] ...


relevancy

relevancy pl: -cies : relevance ...


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