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Ticket - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Duplicate

Duplicate, second letters-patent, granted by the Lord Chancellor in the same term as the first when the letters were void; a copy or transcript of a deed, or other writing; the ticket given by a pawnbroker (see that title) to the pawner of a chattel....


Trade marks

Trade marks. by the Trade Marks Act, 1905 (English) (5 Edw. 7, c. 15), s. 3:-A 'mark' shall include a device, brand, heading, label, ticket, name, signature, word, letter, numeral or any combination thereof.A 'trade mark' shall mean a mark used or proposed to be used upon or in connexion with goods for the purpose of indicating that they are the goods of the proprietor of such trademark by virtue of manufacture, selection, certification, dealing with, or offering for sale.A 'registrable trademark' shall mean a trade mark which is capable of registration under the pro-visions of this Act.Subject to the Trade Mark Acts, the owner of a trademark has a right to its use in connection with the goods associated with it, whether or not it is registered or registrable by him, and if that right is infringed by a sale of other goods under his mark, or a colourable imitation or otherwise so as to be calculated to deceive a purchaser that those goods are goods of his manufacture, sale or mark, the ...


Trade mark and property mark

Trade mark and property mark, the concept of trade mark is distinct from that of a property mark. A mark, as defined by s. 2(1)(j) of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, includes a device, brand, heading, label, ticket, name, signature, world, letter or numerical or any combination thereof. A trade mark means a mark used in relation to goods for the purpose of indicating or so as to indicate a connection in the course of trade between the goods and some person having the right as proprietor to use that mark. The function of a trade mark is to give an indication to the purchaser or a possible purchaser as to the manufacture or quality of the goods, to give an indication to his eye of the trade source from which the goods come, or the trade hands through which they pass on their way to the market. On the other hand, a property mark, as defined by s. 479 of the Penal Code means a mark used for denoting that a movable property belongs to a particular person. Thus, the distinction be...


Property mark

Property mark, as defined by s. 479 of the Penal Code means a mark used for denoting that a movable property belongs to a particular person. The concept of a trade mark is distinct from that of a property mark. A mark as defined by s. 2(1) (j) of the trade and Marchandise Marks Act, 1958, includes a device, brand, heading, label, ticket, name, signature, word, letter or numerical or any combination thereof, Sumat Prasad Jain v. Sheojanam Pradas & State of Bihar, AIR 1972 SC 2488: (1973) 1 SCC 56: (1973) 1 SCR 1050....


Licence

Licence [fr. licentia, Lat.], a permission given by one man to another to do some act which without such permission it would be unlawful for him to do. It is a personal right, and is not transferable, but dies with the man to whom it is given. It can as a rule be revoked by the licensor unless the licensee has paid money for it (Odgers on the Common Law, pp. 25, 574). As to the nature and effect of the licence granted to the purchaser of a ticket for a theatre or other similar entertainment, see Hurst v. Picture Theatres, (1915) 1 KB 1, and the authorities there referred to, and Allen & Sons v. King, (1916) 2 AC 54. It may be either written or verbal; when written, the paper containing the authority is often called a licence. A licence amounting to or coupled with an interest in an incorporeal hereditament must be under seal [see Wood v. Leadbitter, (1845) 13 M&W 838], or it may be revocable, but see Lowe v. Adams, (1901) 1 Ch 598.A licence is necessary before doing many acts, as to ma...


Fares

Fares, includes sums payable for a season ticket or in respect of the hire of a contract carriage. [Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (59 of 1988), s. 2 (12)]...


lead to

Same as cause as the roaring stock market led to an increase in the purchase of big ticket items during the 1996 Christmas season...


Docket, Docquet

Docket, Docquet ['fr. tocyn, W., a slip or ticket']...


Concurrent

Concurrent, acting in conjunction; agreeing in the same act; contributing to the same event; contemporaneous. As to concurrent writs of summons, which are used for service abroad, etc., and of which a plaintiff can have on payment as many as he pleases, see R.S.C., 1883, Ord. VI. Concurrent sentences, if newly passed, can always be given, but a sentence cannot be given to a prisoner convicted whilst out on ticket of leave to run concurrently with his unexpired sentence; per Hawkins, J., in R. v. King, (1897) 1 QB 218....


Coal

Coal may be sold by weight only by the (English) Weights and Measures Act, 1889 (52 & 53 Vict. c. 21), s. 20. The seller delivers a weight ticket for the whole quantity sold, Kyle v. Dunsdon, (1908) 2 KB 293. The weighing is to take place at the premises of the seller, not on delivery at the premises of the purchaser, Knowles v. Sinclair, 1898 (1) QB 170. See WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. As to the validity of bye-laws requiring coal carts to carry weighing machines, see Kent County Council v. Humphrey, 1895 (1) QB 903; Alty v. Farrell, 1896 (1) QB 636....



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