Suitable - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: suitableSuitable
Suitable, has to be read in the context for which the enactment is made. Where the promotion is to be made for the post of stenographer, the stenographer must be efficient in shorthand writing and typing. The suitability must relate to this aspect, Virendra Kumar Misra v. State of Uttar Pradesh, (1995) All LJ 778.Suitable, the word 'suitability' itself is correlated with the object of recruitment, namely, that a person has to be considered suitable for appoint-ment to a superior service which itself furnished the norm that he is considered suitable having regard to his service in the State Forest Service. This in turn refers only to the past records of the service in the State as an officer of the State Forest Service. The Special Selection Board under Regulation 5(2)(a) has to adjudge the suitability of an officer from his service records which from the basis of the preparation of the list and the list to prepared after consideration of the records would reflect the overall assessment...
Suitability or suitable
Suitability or suitable, is used, the object of the enactment and the purpose sought to be achieved. In any case, the adjudging of suitability for recruit-ment has been suggested by the method of viva voce, Janki Prasad v. State of J&K, (1973) 1 SCC 420: (1973) 3 SCR 236...
Subject to suitable agreement being arranged between your solicitor and mine
Subject to suitable agreement being arranged between your solicitor and mine, means that the execution of a suitable agreement or suitable agreements in a form approved by the solicitors on both sides is a condition of any concluded bargain, Lockett v. Norman Wright, 1925 Ch 56....
Timber
Timber, has an enlarged or restricted sense, according to the connection in which it is employed, and may refer to standing trees or wood suitable for the manufacture of lumber to be used for building and allied purposes, Corpus Juris Secundum, Vol. 54, p. 1.Timber, may be used in a restricted as well as enlarged sense. In the restricted sense it means specified trees like oak, ash, elm, teace, blackwood, ebony etc. and in the enlarged sense it means woods suitable for building, furniture, and carpentry etc., and includes standing trees. Its true meaning has to be determined from the context in which it is employed, Divisional Forest Officer v. Tata Finlay Ltd., AIR 2001 SC 2672. [See also Kerala Grants and Leases (Modification of Rights) Act, 1980, s. 4]Means at common law oak, ash and elm are timber if over twenty years old, but not so old as to have unusable wood in them. Other trees may be timber by the custom of the country. Thus beech is timber by the custom of Buckinghamshire an...
Expedient
Expedient, In Words and Phrases (Permanent Edn.), Vol. 15A, Evidence-Eyewitness the word 'expedient' has been described as when used as an adjective as 'apt' and 'suitable to the end in view'; 'furthering, or adapted to further, what is purposed'; practical and efficient; as, an expedient change of policy; an expedient solution of a difficulty, hence, advantageous. The word 'expedient' occurring in the statute authorising modification, revocation under the circumstances would comprehend whatever is suitable and appropriate for any reason for the accomplishment of the specified object, Hotal Sea Civil v. State of West Bengal, (2002) 4 SCC 1(13).The word 'expedient' used in this provision, has several shades of meaning. In one dictionary sense, 'expedient' (adj.) means 'apt and suitable to the end in view', 'practical and efficient'; 'politic'; 'profitable'; 'advisable', 'fit, proper and suitable to the circumstances of the case'. In another shade, it means a device 'characterised by mer...
use
use 1 a : an arrangement in which property is granted to another with the trust and confidence that the grantor or another is entitled to the beneficial enjoyment of it see also trust Statute of Uses in the Important Laws section NOTE: Uses originated in early English law and were the origin of the modern trust. Uses became popular in medieval England, where they were often secretly employed as a method of evading laws (as those prohibiting mortmain) and penalties (as attainder) and to defeat creditors. In response, the Statute of Uses was enacted in 1535. The purpose of the Statute was to execute the use, investing the legal ownership of the property in the cestui que use, or one entitled to the beneficial enjoyment, and abolishing the ownership of the grantee. The Statute did not have blanket application, however. Certain uses, particularly those in which the grantee was not merely a passive holder of the property, were not executed under the Statute. These uses were called trust...
Decorum
Propriety of manner or conduct grace arising from suitableness of speech and behavior to ones own character or to the place and occasion decency of conduct seemliness that which is seemly or suitable...
Opportunity
Fit or convenient time or situation a time or place permitting or favorable for the execution of a purpose a suitable combination of conditions suitable occasion chance...
Cloth
Cloth. By 12 Edw. 3, c. 3, no cloth made beyond sea might be brought into the kingdom on paint of forfeiture of the goods and punishment of the importer.Going by the meaning given in dictionaries as well as by its generally accepted popular connotation 'cloth' is woven, knitted or felted material which is pliable and is capable of being wrapped, folded or wound around. It need not necessarily be material suitable for making garments because there can be 'cloth' suitable only for industrial purpose; but nevertheless it must possess the basic feature of pliability. Hard and thick material which cannot be wrapped or wound around cannot be regarded as 'cloth', Filterco v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, (1986) 1 SCR 239: AIR 1986 SC 626 (627): (1986) 2 SCC 103. [MP General Sales Tax Act (2 of 1959) s. 42B and Sch. I, Entry 6]...
Cotton textile
Cotton textile, the dictionary meaning of 'cotton textile' is that textile is a woven fabric and any kind of cloth. Cotton textile is a finished product. Cotton textile is an end product. The dictionary meanings of cotton textile are any material that is woven, a material, as a fibre or yarn, used in or suitable for weaving, woven or capable of being woven. The meaning of 'textile' as a noun is a fabric which is or may be woven fabric, made by weaving, a woven fabric, or a material suitable for weaving, textile material. The dictionary meanings show that cotton yarn is concluded in cotton textile, Shree Meenakshi Mills Ltd. v. Union of India, (1974) 1 SCC 468: AIR 1974 SC 366 (371)....
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