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Indian Railway Board Act 1905 4 Code of Civil Procedures 1908 5 Explosive Substances Act 1908 6 Central Provinces Financial Commissioner’s Act 1908 13 Indian Ports Act 1908 15 Registration Act 1908 16 Presidency Towns Insolvency Act 1909 3 Anand Marriage Act 1909 7 Indian Museum Act 1910 10 Co-operative Societies Act 1912 2
The British Indian press was legally protected by the set of laws such as Vernacular Press Act, Censorship of Press Act, 1799, Metcalfe Act and Indian Press Act, 1910, while the media outlets were regulated by the Licensing Regulations, 1823, Licensing Act, 1857 and Registration Act, 1867.
The Act was repealed by the British government shortly after enactment (after some lobbying by a delegation led by Mahatma Gandhi), but it was re-enacted again in 1908. Under the act, every Asian man, woman or child of eight years or upwards, entitled to reside in the Transvaal, was required to register their names with the Registrar of ...
Sir Dinshah Fardunji Mulla CIE (1868 – 26 April 1934), [2] also known as Dinshaw Mulla, was an Indian lawyer, legal writer, and judge. D.F Mulla was an Attorney-at-Law of the Bombay High Court and was a professor of law at Government Law College, Bombay and a member of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council , India.
The Indian Fisheries (Tamil Nadu Amendment) Act, 1927; The Indian Lunacy (Tamil Nadu Amendment) Act, 1938; The Indian Medical Degrees (Tamil Nadu Amendment) Act, 1940; The Indian Partnership (Tamil Nadu Amendment) Act, 1959; The Indian Penal Code and the Code of Criminal Procedure (Tamil Nadu Amendment) Act, 1960; The Indian Registration (Tamil ...
Also, The Registration Act,1908, 2(6) "immovable property" includes land, buildings, hereditary allowances, rights to ways, lights, ferries, fisheries or any other benefit to arise out of the land, and things attached to the earth or permanently fastened to anything which is attached to the earth, but not standing timber, growing crops nor grass.
The origin of the first Law Commission of India lies in the diverse and often conflicting laws prevailing in the local regions and those administered by the East India Company, which was granted royal charters and also conferred powers by the various Indian rulers to administer and oversee the conduct of the inhabitants in the local areas where the company exercised control. [4]
(5) The procedure to be followed in compulsory registration of the citizens of India shall be such as may be prescribed. The Citizenship (Registration of Citizens and Issue of National Identity Cards) Rules, 2003, formulated under the Act specify: [14] 4. Preparation of the National Register of Indian Citizens.