Tea - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: tea Page: 2 Page 2 of about 63 results ( seconds)Oolong
A fragrant variety of black tea having somewhat the flavor of green tea...
VerbarMate
The Paraguay tea being the dried leaf of the Brazilian holly Ilex Paraguensis The infusion has a pleasant odor with an agreeable bitter taste and is much used for tea in South America...
Cha
Tea the Chinese Mandarin name used generally in early works of travel and now for a kind of rolled tea used in Central Asia...
Caddy
A small box can or chest to keep tea in also called tea caddy...
Plaintiff
Plaintiff [abbrev. pltf., or plff., fr. plaintif., Fr.], he who commences an action against another, who is called defendant.It includes:(i) any person from or through whom a plaintiff derives his right to sue. [Limitation Act, 1963, s. 2 (i) (i)](ii) any person whose estate is represented by the plaintiff as executor, administrator or other representative. [Limitation Act, 1963, (36 of 1963), s. 2]The word 'plaintiff' in order that the bar may be effective, include his assigns and legal representa-tives, Suraj Rattan v. Azamabad Tea Co. Ltd., AIR 1965 SC 295 (301). [Civil PC (1908), O. 9, R. 9]...
Forest
Forest [fr. foresta, Ital.], an incorporeal hereditament, being the right or franchise of keeping, for the purpose of venery and hunting, the wild beasts and fowls of forest, chase, park, and warren (which means all animals pursued in field sports), in a certain teritory or precinct of woody ground and pasture set apart for the purpose, with laws and officers of its own, established for protection of the game, Manw. For. Laws.A tract of land, not necessarily wooded, reserved to king or a grantee, for hunting deer and other game, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 660.The Charta de Foresta, confirmed in Parliament, 9 Hen. 3, disafforested many forests unlawfully made. Some of the royal forests still exist, as the New Forest in Hampshire, and Windsor; they are now administered by the Commissioners of Crown Lands and Forestry Commission; see FORESTRY ACTS. A forest is, in general, a royal possession, though it is capable of being vested in a subject. A forest is a right which the owner ...
In the manufacture of goods
In the manufacture of goods would normally encompass the entire process carried on by the dealer of converting raw materials into finished goods. Where any particular process is so integrally connected with the ultimate production of goods that but for that process, manufacture or processing of goods would be commercially inexpedient, goods required in that process would, in our judgment, fall with in the expression 'in the manufacture of goods, Rajasthan SEB v. Associated Stone Industries, (2000) 6 SCC 141.In the manufacture of goods, the expression 'in the manufacture of goods' in s. 8(3)(b) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 should normally encompasses the entire process carried on by the dealer of converting the raw material into finished goods. Where any particular process is so integrally connected with the ultimate production of goods that, but for that process, manufacture or process-ing of goods would be commercially inexpedient, goods, required in that process would fall with...
Incidental power
Incidental power, The incidental power is one that is directly and immediately appropriate to the execution of the specific power created and not one that has a slight or remote relation to it, Laxmi Tea Co. Ltd. v. Pradeep Kumar Sarkar, 1989 Supp (2) SCC 656 (662)....
Inland revenue
Inland revenue. That portion (by far the largest) of the public revenue (which is derived from the taxation of home commodities and duties on property and income, houses, stamps, probates, legacies, etc., as distinguished from the portion derived by customs duties (see CUSTOMS) from imported commodities-such as foreign wine and spirits, tea, etc. It is supervised by (English) Inland Revenue Commissioners (the number of whom, now four, is not limited by statute, and the quorum of whom is two), and a large number of enactments relating to its regulation are contained in the consolidating Inland Revenue Regulation Act, 1890 (53 & 54 Vict. c. 21). By s. 39 of that Act 'inland revenue' means 'the revenue of the United Kingdom collected or imposed as stamp duties, taxes, and duties of excise.' (see that title), 'and placed under the care and management of the Inland Revenue Commissioners.' By 8 Edw. 7, c. 16, the management of excise duties were transferred to the Commissioners of Customs an...
Jus spatiandi
Jus spatiandi, a right to walk about at pleasure over the land of another person; no such right is known to English law, see International Tea Stores Co. v. Hobbs, (1903) 2 Ch 172; A.-G. v. Antrobus, (1905) 2 Ch 198....
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