Example sentences of "of the [noun] act " in BNC.

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1 In addition there will be specific warranties aimed at specific provisions of the Taxes Acts related to matters such as :
2 As an alternative to payment under Deed of Covenant , Tradeco could make payments under the Gift Aid provisions of the Taxes Act .
3 Where the accountants advise that the Revenue ought to be asked to treat the firm as a continuing business , a new partner will be required to join in a continuation election under s113 of the Taxes Act ( see Chapter 10 ) .
4 It is ss839(7) and 416 of the Taxes Act which mean that management could be " connected " with Newco for these purposes .
5 If the payments are ex gratia rather than to compensate the individual for loss of a contractual entitlement , they may amount to distributions within s209 or " other benefits or facilities of whatever nature " which are treated as distributions by s418 of the Taxes Act when paid by a close company .
6 The significance of this is that , if Newco is also a close company and the various conditions in ss13A , 353 and 360 of the Taxes Act are satisfied , management should be entitled to interest relief on loans they take out to acquire ordinary shares in Newco .
7 This is because both the close company regime in Part XI of the Taxes Act and the " connected persons " rules for capital gains tax purposes rely on the definition of " control " in s416 TA 1988 .
8 Settlement and accordingly settled property for the purposes of TCGA 1992 , s87(1) are defined by reference to the definition in Part XV of the Taxes Act 1988 ( see TCGA 1992 , s97(7) ) .
9 " Settlement " and accordingly " settled property " for the purposes of TCGA 1992 , ss87-96 and 97(1) — ( 6 ) are defined by reference to the definition in Part XV of the Taxes Act 1988 .
10 It is not possible to argue that Part XV of the Taxes Act 1988 deems that interest to belong to the American .
11 The £2,000 is chargeable under Case V of Schedule D. The £1,000 derived from the UK property could be caught by Part XV of the Taxes Act .
12 As a result of the second limb of what is now s681(1) ( a ) being passed into law , the Inland Revenue could assess all the income under Part XV of the Taxes Act ; with regard to the income of £2,000 derived from the American shares the Inland Revenue may have an option whether to charge the same under Case V of Schedule D or if , for instance , s672 is the relevant provision under which Part XV is applied , then under Case VI of Schedule D ( s679 ) .
13 The situation may arise where the taxpayer is on the face of it chargeable to tax under Case V of Schedule D and also caught by Part XV of the Taxes Act 1988 .
14 Badgers and their setts are now protected from human interference for the first time , with the introduction of the Badgers Act ( 1991 ) in October .
15 If the scope of the enabling Act is exceeded or the procedures set out in it are not followed , the secondary legislation thereby created is said to be ultra vires ( i.e. beyond the power given ) .
16 The third criticism is that the medical basis of the Infanticide Act 1938 is now discredited : the reference to the effect of lactation is without foundation , and it is acknowledged that the social pressures consequent upon the arrival of a new child ( such as financial demands , unsuitable housing , effects on family relationships ) may be just as likely to lead to the mental disturbance manifest in these cases as any condition linked specifically with the event of giving birth .
17 For example , one Lambodar Gorain has been held in Ranchi Jail since 18th June 1970 , for an offence under Section 25 of the Arms Act … with the result that he has been in prison for eight and a half years for an offence for which even if convicted , he could not have been awarded more than two years imprisonment … .
18 Another feature of the new approach is that the software industry has been exempted from the licensing provision of the Industries Act : there are no constraints on the setting up of software houses , and programming is not treated as an industrial activity .
19 In some they played a role of significance as sources of recruits for the regular army in time of war — for example in France , where a system of militia service was established by Louvois in 1688 and revived in 1726 , in Spain , in Piedmont and in England after the passage of the Militia Act of 1757 .
20 Emmonsailes Heath , now known as Ails worth Heath , shrank drastically during Clare 's life time , the result of the Enclosure Act which was enforced in Helps ton in 1809 .
21 The deputy judge refused probate of the 1982 document on the grounds that it had not been duly executed in that , although the amendment by section 17 of the Administration of Justice Act 1982 of section 9 of the Wills Act 1837 allowed a valid signature to be made otherwise than at the foot of the will , it had not altered the requirement that the testator should have made his will before signing it ; and that , in any event , the testator had lacked testamentary capacity .
22 Held , dismissing the appeal , that the object of the substituted section 9 of the Wills Act 1837 had been to simplify the requirements for the execution and witnessing of a will ; that the complementary requirements , of a signature and of an intention that the signature should give effect to the will , demanded a practical approach ; that a written name , not being a normal signature , was capable of being a signature for the purposes of section 9 ; but that where a testamentary document was signed before the dispositive provisions had been written , affirmative evidence was necessary to show that the testator had intended the signature to give effect to the provisions ; that by writing his name and the dispositive provisions in one single operation the deceased had provided such evidence ; and that , accordingly , the will had been duly executed ; but that , on the evidence , the deputy judge had been entitled to conclude that the onus on the defendants of establishing the testamentary capacity of the deceased had not been discharged ( post , pp. 588B–H , 589B–F , 592A–C ) .
23 The first defendant appealed on the grounds , inter alia , that ( 1 ) the deputy judge had been wrong in law in holding that for the substituted section 9 ( b ) of the Wills Act 1837 to be satisfied the testator had to make his signature after making the dispositive provisions ; and ( 2 ) there was no sufficient evidence upon which the deputy judge could have found that the testator had not been of testamentary capacity at the time he had made and signed the alleged codicil on 18 April 1986 .
24 He did so on two grounds : first , that the document had not been duly executed in accordance with the requirements of section 9 of the Wills Act 1837 , as substituted for the original section by section 17 of the Administration of Justice Act 1982 ; and , secondly , that the deceased lacked testamentary capacity .
25 The question is whether or not the document , prepared and signed as it was , satisfies the requirements of the substituted section 9 of the Wills Act 1837 .
26 Every such gift is a circumvention of the Wills Act 1837 .
27 That the provision of the Education Acts be extended to the deaf and dumb and that such children should receive compulsory education between the ages of seven and sixteen .
28 Of course , many LEAs actively supported the work of the two major providers , but even without explicit support the field of liberal adult education was not seen as attractive territory for LEA participation or control until the implementation of the Education Act 1944 in the early nineteen fifties .
29 This has been well illustrated by section 76 of the Education Act 1944 , which provides that ‘ children are to be educated in accordance with the wishes of their parents ’ , provided that this would be ‘ compatible with the provision of efficient instruction and training and the avoidance of unreasonable public expenditure ’ .
30 Nevertheless , despite a similar provision in section 6(3) of the Education Act 1980 ( enabling , until the ERA 1988 restricted its effect to schools which are not yet subject to LMS , parental preference to be denied formally on economic efficiency grounds ) considerable extensions of parental rights have occurred , as shown below .
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