| George Anderson, Manilal Bhagwandes Sudebar - 1918 - 216 sider
...form is denned in the following words of Lord Dalhousie : 1 —" I hold that on all occasions when heirs natural shall fail, the territory should be...made to lapse and adoption should not be permitted, 2 excepting in those cases in which some strong political reason may render it expedient to depart... | |
| George Anderson, Manilal Bhagwandas Sudebar - 1918 - 218 sider
...form is denned in the following words of Lord Dalhousie : 1 — " I hold that on all occasions when heirs natural shall fail, the territory should be made to lapse and adoption should not be permitted,2 excepting in those cases in which some strong political reason may render it expedient... | |
| Baman Das Basu - 1922 - 598 sider
...28. In like manner, while I would not seek to lay down any inflexible rule with respect to adoption, I hold that, on all occasions, where heirs natural...render it expedient to depart from this general rule. 29. There may be conflict of opinion as to the advantage or the propriety of extending our already... | |
| Keshavial B. Kamdar - 1922 - 618 sider
...applied the doctrine of lapse to all t>uch cases. He said : — I hold that on all occasions when heirs " shall fail, the territory should be made to lapse and adoption should not be permitted." He meant to apply this doctrine remorselessly to those rulerships, " created or revived by the Sartad... | |
| Sir Mark Frank Lindley - 1926 - 424 sider
...prospective. In like manner, while I would not seek to lay down any inflexible rule with respect to adoption, I hold that, on all occasions where heirs natural...political reason may render it expedient to depart from the general rule. ... I cannot conceive it possible for anyone to dispute the policy of taking advantage... | |
| Gautam Chakravarty - 2005 - 276 sider
...independence served no purpose and whose military resources were either in British hands or negligible. Hence, 'on all occasions, where heirs natural shall fail,...may render it expedient to depart from this general rule'.3' Following Satara, the Doctrine was applied against the dynastic houses of Sambalpur (1849),... | |
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