state. This is what happened to the cherokee indians during 1830 when the indian removal act was signed. The cherokee had been living in Georgia for a hundred years before the first Georgians arrived and were forced to move west into Louisiana. There were many reasons for this act to happen however it was as if the Cherokee had no say against it. The government was very biased for its people and did little to support the cherokee. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 was not justified because the cherokees
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Contents Table of cases Introduction Bailment Defined Position under English Law Position under Indian law Conclusion Table of Cases Altas vs. Patil AIR 2004 Ker Atul Mehra And Anr. vs Bank Of Maharashtra on 22 March, 2002 Basanta Kumar vs. Kumud Mitter 1900 Binns vs. Piggot Bevan vs. Waters (1828) Jones vs. Turloe, 1723,8 Mod 172. Blount vs. War Office 1953, Damodar Das Agarwal vs. R. Badrilal
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INTRODUCTION Frustration of contract is employed when performance of the obligations by any of the parties becomes impossible due to external factors without any fault of any of the parties. It must be remembered that it applies to those cases of subsequent impossibility and not to those which are impossible right from the outset. The doctrine of frustration was devised for a different class of cases of contracts in which the circumstances so occur that the execution of the contract as required by the terms
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compensation for the breach of contract to the plaintiff firm? Section 16 of the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 clearly stated: Subject to the provisions of this Act and of any other law for the time being in force, there is no implied warranty or condition as to the quality or fitness for any particular purpose of goods supplied under a contract of sale In the case of Dharmpal & Co, Agra v. Firm Kila Gatla Ram Chandra Rao & Co , the court held that the buyer cannot repudiate the contract of sale on account of
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Sale of Goods National Law School of India University Law of Contracts II Transfer of rights under the Sale of Goods Act Submitted by: Shivendu Pandey Id No.- 1928 Date of Submission: 13th April, 2011. Table of Contents Introduction 3 Transfer of rights under the Sale of Goods Acts 4 What is a Sale? 4 Essentials of a contract of sale 4 Definition of property 4 Transfer of property as between seller and buyer 5 Passing of Property or Transfer of Ownership 5 Property cannot
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................................................................................................................ 2 2. PRE AND POST LIBERALIZATION ............................................................................................... 3 3. INDIAN LABOUR LAWS ............................................................................................................. 4 4. PRESENT SCENARIO OF LABOUR AND MNCs IN INDIA ........................................................... 8 5. PERCEPTION
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A “Calibrated Approach”: Pharmaceutical FDI and the Evolution of Indian Patent Law Web version: August 2007 Authors: Katherine Connor Linton and Nicholas Corrado1 Abstract India has charted its own intellectual property (IP) path over the last 35 years, attempting to foster the growth of a domestic pharmaceutical industry and access to medicine while, more recently, also addressing the requirements of the international IP regime. Multinational companies (MNCs) have responded to India’s movement
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................................................................................................................ 2 2. PRE AND POST LIBERALIZATION ............................................................................................... 3 3. INDIAN LABOUR LAWS ............................................................................................................. 4 4. PRESENT SCENARIO OF LABOUR AND MNCs IN INDIA ........................................................... 8 5. PERCEPTION
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Tort of Conspiracy, Employment law and Discharge of Contract. As part of the common law, Duress happens when one party refuses to agree into a contract and is forced to agree to the contract by violence or a threat, and also the threat must be of relation to actual physical violence to life, limb or liberty of the plaintiff or members of his family. In the case of Barton v Armstrong (1976), A threatened to kill B if B did not enter a contract which was wholly unfavourable to B. In relation to this
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Auction………………...……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….......3 2.1 Legal Aspect as per The Sale of Goods Act, 1930...............................................................3 2.1.1 Legal Rules Regarding Auction.............................................................................3 2.2 Legal Aspect as per The Indian Contract t, 1872................................................................4 2.3 Auction Terminologies…………………………………….....
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