Repairable - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: repairableRepair
Repair, 'repair' may include replacement or even a renewal. All replacements or renewals need not necessarily be repairs covenant for repairs making lessee liable to execute all repairs except major repairs, tenant undertook substantial repairs, Sir Shadi Lal and Sons v. Commissioner of Income Tax, AIR 1988 SC 424: (1988) Supp SCC 42: (1988) 2 SCR 87.The ideal of 'repair' may include replacement or even a renewal. But the converse may not be true. All replacements or renewals need not necessarily by 'repairs', Shadi Lal v. CIT, AIR 1998 SC 424 (427): 1988 Supp SCC 42. [Income Tax Act, 1961, s. 24(1)(i) (a) and s. 4(1)(i)(b)]Repair, indicates the restoration to a good and sound condition of a structure which has been decayed or damages, Jiya Lal v. State of Uttar Pradesh, AIR 1981 All 72....
Repairs and improvements
Repairs and improvements, all repairs are improve-ments though all improvements are not repairs, AIR 1960 Mad 24(27) (Transfer of Property Act, 1882, s. 76)...
Tenantable repair
Tenantable repair, means a repair that will render premises fit for present habitation, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1479.Tenantable Repair. See LANDLORD AND TENANT....
credit repair companies
credit repair companies Private, for-profit businesses that claim to offer consumers credit and debt repayment difficulties assistance with their credit problems and a bad credit report. Source: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development ...
Repairer
One who or that which repairs restores or makes amends...
Repairment
Act of repairing...
Repairer
Repairer, includes a person who adjusts, cleans, lubricants or paints any weight or measure or renders any other service to such weight or mea-sure to ensure that such weight or measure conforms to the standards established by or under this Act. [Standards of Weights and Measures Act, 1976 (60 of 1976), s. 2(u)]...
Landlord and tenant
Landlord and tenant. A tenancy arises when the owner of an estate inland, called the lessor or landlord, agrees expressly or by implication to allow another person, called the lessee or tenant, to enjoy the exclusive possession and use of the land for a period less than the landlord's estate in it, generally upon payment of rent. The landlord's estate is called the reversion, and at common law, a power of distress for rent is incident to the reversion.Leases or tenancies may be (1) for any agreed period such as for years or less, e.g., for a year, half-year, quarter or week; (2) from year to year; (3) at will; (4) on sufferance; or (5) they may arise upon estoppel; or (6) exist by force of a statute (see LEASE; INCREASE OF RENT). In a narrower sense the words 'tenancy' and 'landlord and tenant' are generally restricted to lease of a house or land for occupational purposes. If nothing appears to the contrary, either expressly or by implication, in the lease or agreement, the landlord is...
Way
Way [fr. w'g, Sax.; weigh, Dut.; vig or wig, M. Goth.], road made for passengers.1. A passage or pat 2. A right to travel over another's property, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1587.There are three kinds of ways:-1st, a footway (iter); 2nd, a footway and horseway (actus, vulgarly called packe and prime way; 3rd, via or aditus, which contains the other two, and also a cartway, etc.; and this is two-fold, viz., regia via, the king's highway for all men, and communis strata, belonging to a city or town or between neighbours and neighbours. This is called in our books chimin, Co. Litt. 56 a.All ways are divided into highways and private ways. A right of way strictly means a private way, i.e. a privilege which an individual or a particular description of persons may have of going over another's ground. Such a right is an incorporeal hereditament.A highway is a public passage for the sovereign and all his subjects, and it is commonly called the king's public highway; and the turnpike ...
Bailee
Bailee, a person to whom goods are entrusted for a specific purpose. See BAILMENT; as to Larceny by Bailee, see (English) Larceny Act, 1916, ss. 1 and 2.The party of whom personal property is delivered under a contract of bailment; one to whom goods are bailed. (Contract Act, 1872, s. 148)Where in an accident the Insured dealt with vehicle strictly as provided under the contract of insurance and that necessitated taking the car to the nearest repairer for and on behalf of the Insurer. The Insurer became the bailee and the repairer may have been initially pointed out by the bailor but with whom the Insurer entered negotiation, arrived at a contract and agreed to get the car repaired in discharge of an obligation under the contract of insurance. Therefore, for this additional reason the custody of the repairer is that of a sub-bailee, N.R. Srinivasa Iyer v. New India Assurance Company Limited, AIR 1983 SC 899: (1983) 3 SCC 458 (467).Means an individual or entity (as a business organizati...
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