The Government of India: Being a Digest of the Statute Law Relating Thereto; with Historical Introduction and Explanatory Matter

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Clarendon Press, 1916 - 499 páginas

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Página 151 - Commission would, broadly speaking, be required to devise a scheme which may reasonably be hoped to possess the necessary elements of finality; and to do full justice to the claims of natives of India to a higher and more extensive employment in the Public Service.
Página 356 - Bengal, from time to time, to make and issue such rules, ordinances, and regulations, for the good order and civil government...
Página 89 - Subject of His Majesty resident therein, shall, by reason only of his Religion, Place of Birth, Descent, Colour, or any of them, be disabled from holding any Place, Office, or Employment under the said Company.
Página 56 - Calcutta : provided that their inheritance and succession to lands, rents and goods, and all matters of contract and dealing between party and party...
Página 240 - The Governor- General may, in cases of emergency, make and promulgate ordinances for the peace and good government of British India or any part thereof, and any ordinance so made shall, for the space of not more than six months from its promulgation, have the like force of law as an Act passed by the Indian legislature...
Página 391 - Her Majesty's dominions, in the same and as ample a manner as if Her Majesty had acquired such power or jurisdiction by the cession or conquest of territory...
Página 78 - ... a sum of not less than one lac of rupees in each year shall be set apart and applied to the revival and improvement of literature, and the encouragement of the learned natives of India, and for the introduction and promotion of a knowledge of the sciences among the inhabitants of the British territories in India...
Página 272 - Where any person, being a British subject, is charged with having committed any offence on board any British ship on the high seas...
Página 96 - State, to conduct the business transacted in the United Kingdom in relation to the government of and the correspondence with India...
Página 231 - The Indian Legislature has powers expressly limited by the Act of the Imperial Parliament which created it, and it can-, of course, do nothing beyond the limits which circumscribe these powers. But, when acting within those limits, it is not in any sense an agent or delegate of the Imperial Parliament, but has, and was intended to have, plenary powers of legislation, as large, and of the same nature, as those of Parliament itself.

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