Section 5 of limitation act 1963, provides for the existence of time or condonation of delay in case of exigency. This is known as doctrine of sufficient cause. The applicant will have to prove that he had sufficient cause or a valid reason for not applying within the prescribed time as per the act.
The court might then overlook the delay and accept the application in all regularity, as if it were submitted within the specified time. however, this power is a discretionary power, only to be exercised by the courts were they feel that the case is so warrents.
Sufficient cause is a cause without which will not cause the disease but with it will absolutely will cause the disease.
Loyalists
Loyalists
A necessary cause is a condition that, by and large, must be present for the effect to follow. A sufficient cause, in contrast, is a condition that more or less guarantees the effect in question.
Loyalists
Propaganda
Probable cause.
Yes, you should be able to, as long as you have sufficient "cause."
The Truman Doctrine underpinned American Cold War policy in Europe and around the world. The doctrine endured because it addressed a broader cultural insecurity regarding modern life in a globalized world.
The Truman Doctrine underpinned American Cold War policy in Europe and around the world. The doctrine endured because it addressed a broader cultural insecurity regarding modern life in a globalized world.
Yes, you should be able to, as long as you have sufficient "cause."
John Quincy Adams wrote the Monroe Doctrine after receiving threats from European powers to recover colonies in Latin America.