Legal Fictions |
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Page 66
... extended by a process of logical development which loses sight of their origin and carries them far beyond the reach of any justification as they may have originally possessed , 13 Illustrations ( i ) The fiction that a child in embryo ...
... extended by a process of logical development which loses sight of their origin and carries them far beyond the reach of any justification as they may have originally possessed , 13 Illustrations ( i ) The fiction that a child in embryo ...
Page 67
... extended to deny to the wife of a disqualified man the right to an inheritance when it opens . 21 The wife of the murderer can succeed to the estate of murdered man in her own right and will not be affected by the hus- band's ...
... extended to deny to the wife of a disqualified man the right to an inheritance when it opens . 21 The wife of the murderer can succeed to the estate of murdered man in her own right and will not be affected by the hus- band's ...
Page 92
... extended to the substitute and the like . The Hindu adoption was made essentially with a spiritual motive . Atri- smriti says " only by a sonless man shall be made a substitute for a son by all possible efforts for the purpose of ...
... extended to the substitute and the like . The Hindu adoption was made essentially with a spiritual motive . Atri- smriti says " only by a sonless man shall be made a substitute for a son by all possible efforts for the purpose of ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Alienation | 28 |
Equity and Legal fictions | 34 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
according action actual adoption allowed analogy applied assumed assumption authority become called child civil civil death common law conceal conclusive constructive contract corporation courts created death decision deemed defendant doctrine effect employed enactments England English entities equity established example existing express extended fact false fictitious function give Hindu law historical husband implied important Indian instance intention interpretation introduced judge judicial Jurisprudence juristic justice lawyers legal concepts legal fictions legal person legal rule legal system legislation limited Lord matter means nature needs object obligations observed offences operation original parties possession practical presumption principle reality reason recognised reference regarded relation remarks represent result Roman law rule situation Smritis social society statute theory things thought tion tort treated true trust truth unjust enrichment wife writers Yajnavalkya