Renewal - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: renewal Page: 3 Page 3 of about 130 results ( seconds)nonrenewable
That can not be renewed as a nonrenewable option books on that shelf are nonrenewable Opposite of renewable...
Reparation
The act of renewing restoring etc or the state of being renewed or repaired as the reparation of a bridge or of a highway in this sense repair is oftener used...
Recommitment
A second or renewed commitment a renewed reference to a committee...
Reliquidation
A second or renewed liquidation a renewed adjustment...
Army (UK)
Army (UK) [fr. armee, Fr.], the military force of a country. From1689 to 1879, the army was regulated by Annual Mutiny Acts usually expiring in April, and by the 'Articles of War' which those Acts empowered the sovereign to make. In 1879 the Army Discipline Act (42 & 43 Vict. c. 33) consolidated the provisions of the Mutiny Act with the Articles of War. This Act having been amended by the Army Discipline and Regulation Annual Act, 1881, which substituted 'summary' for corporal punishment, and also by the Regulation of the Forces Act, 1881, a fairly complete military code is now contained in the 'Army Act, 1881' (44 & 45 Vict. c. 58), now styled the 'Army Act' simply, by virtue of s. 4 of the Army (Annual) Act, 1890.The Army Act requires to be annually renewed by an Act passed for that purpose called the 'Army (Annual) Act.' Such annual Act follows the precedent of the Mutiny Acts is reciting the illegality of a standing army in time of peace without consent of Parliament (as declared b...
Refusal to register a firm
Refusal to register a firm, the words 'refusal to register a firm' in s. 30 of the Income Tax Act are wide enough to take in the orders made under Rr. 6A and 6B of the Income Tax Act refusing to renew the registration and also cancelling the certificate so renewed, Sir Hukumchand and Mannalal Co. v. C.I.T., AIR 1966 SC 1552 (1554): (1966) 3 SCR 193....
House of Commons
House of Commons, one of the constituent parts of Parliament, being the assembly of knights of shires, or the representatives of counties; citizens, or the representatives of cities; and burgesses, or the representatives of boroughs.The lowest chamber of British and Canadian Parlia-ment, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 744.Property Qualification.--The property qualification of members, which was by 1 & 2 Vict. c. 48, amending 9 Anne, c. 5, by allowing personal property to count fixed at 600l. a year for a county, and 300l. a year for a borough member, was abolished in 1858 by 21 & 22 Vict. c. 26.Payment of Members.--Members were from very early times entitled to payment at the rate of 4s. a day for county, and 2s. a day for borough members, payable by their constituents. This has never been abolished, and is recognized by the unrepeated 6 Hen. 8, c. 16, by which members may not depart from Parliament without licence from the Speaker on pain of losing their 'wages,' though 35 Hen. ...
Terms for years
Terms for years. An estate for years is denominated a term, because its enjoyment is strictly fixed, for by 'term' is meant not only the interest which passes, but also the period for which it is held. It is a chattel real: chattel, because the estate passes to the owner's executors at his death, and did not pass to his heir-at-law, and so far partakes of the nature of personalty; real, because it is an interest in lands, and therefore partakes of the nature of real property.A term is usually created by a deed or speciality contract, called a lease or demise under the Common Law (see LEASE), and the appropriate operative verbs therein are 'demise,' or 'grant, lease, and to farm let'; but any wards showing the intent of the parties that the one (the lessor) shall divest himself of the possession, and the other (the lessee) come into it for a determinate time, are generally sufficient for the purpose.Terms could not be limited in succession or by way of remainder except by way of trust o...
Tacit relocation
Tacit relocation, a silent or understood reletting of premises after the expiration of a lease, upon the same terms, etc., as those of such lease, Scots Term.Means the implied or constructive renewal of a lease, usually, on a year-to-year basis, when the landlord and tenant have failed to indicate their intention to have the lease terminated at the end of the original term, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1465....
Reversionary lease
Reversionary lease, one to take effect in futuro. A second lease to commence after the expiration of a former lease. It did not create any term or estate, but only an interesse termini (see that title). By the (English) L.P. Act, 1925, s. 149, a term at a rent or a consideration of a fine cannot be created in law to take effect more than twenty-one years from the date of the instrument purporting to create it, and see RENEWAL and OPTION. Consult Foa or Wonafall on Landlord and Tenant...
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