The Punjab Record, Volume 39

Front Cover
1905
 

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Page 343 - ... remedy in respect of any such right, privilege, obligation, liability, penalty, forfeiture, or punishment, as aforesaid ; and any such investigation, legal proceeding, or remedy may be instituted, continued, or enforced and any such penalty, forfeiture, or punishment may be imposed, as if the repealing Act had not been passed.
Page 258 - As of right, from any final judgment of the Court, where the matter in dispute on the Appeal amounts to or is of the value of £500 sterling or upwards, or where the Appeal involves, directly or indirectly, some claim or question to or respecting property or some civil right amounting to or of the value of £500 sterling or upwards...
Page 206 - It has been well said that a thing which Is within the letter of a statute Is not within the statute, unless It be within the Intention of the lawmakers." And In Gold v. Fite, 2 Baxt 248, 249, It Is said : "A thing which Is within the Intention of the makers of a statute is as much within the statute as If It were within the letter.
Page 22 - Judges, but their view appears to be clearly opposed to the principle laid down by their Lordships of the Privy Council in LwJihin Kunwar and others v.
Page 65 - ... it is expedient that the offender be released on probation of good conduct, the Court may, instead of sentencing him at once to any punishment, direct that he be released on his entering into a...
Page 340 - If the Act had come into operation immediately after the time of its being passed, the hardship would have been so great that we might have inferred an intention on the part of the Legislature not to give it a retrospective operation, but when we see that it contains a provision suspending its operation for six weeks, that must...
Page 3 - ... shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to six months, or with fine, or with both. 203. Giving false information respecting an offence committed. — Whoever, knowing or having reason to believe that an offence has been committed...
Page 19 - The doing so should be limited to those instances in which the lower Court has so obstinately blundered and gone wrong as to produce a result mischievous at once to the administration of justice and the interests of the public.
Page 85 - Whoever does any act, with such intention or knowledge and under such circumstances that if he...

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