meaning of the prohibited degrees in the earlier Acts, they mean, in the Divorce Act , not the degrees prohibited by the law of England ... that in our opinion the prohibited degrees for the parties to this marriage were not the degrees prohibited by the law of England, but these
Canon Law any impediment or prohibition exists.
The parties will, therefore, not be within the prohibited
degree of consanguinity. Ground ... necessarily mean the degrees prohibited by the
Law of England. For finding out prohibited degrees it was
the customary law of the class to which
limited to a prohibition consequent on the parties being related to each other within the prohibited degrees. (3) Even if the words of Section ... which Sir Iqbal Ahmad has referred as absolute prohibitions, such as the rules relating to prohibited degrees ?
28. Section 88 is not a detached provision
that in our opinion the prohibited degrees for the parties to this marriage were not the degrees prohibited by the law of England, but those ... that in our opinion the prohibited degrees for the parties to this marriage were not the degrees prohibited by the law of England, but those
They are thus, admittedly, first cousins within the definition of "prohibited degrees of relationship" given in Clause (g) of Section ... uncle and niece or between aunt and the nephew, within the prohibited degree of relationship was not only permissible, but was considered
that, in our opinion, the prohibited degrees for the parties to this marriage were not the degrees prohibited by the Law of England; but those ... that, in our opinion, the prohibited degrees for the parties to this marriage were not the degrees prohibited by the Law of England, but those
institution of the suit;
(2) that the parties are within the
prohibited degrees of consanguinity
(whether natural or legal) or
affinity;
(3) that either party ... nullity
on the ground that the parties were within the prohibited
degrees of consanguinity which is a ground for declaring a
marriage to be nullity
husband being the son of her first cousin was within the prohibited degree of relationship for marriage and that she was associated with one Subba ... relationship between Punnayammal and the second defendant was within the prohibited degree for marriage, according to the Hindu Law Texts and Sastras, the marriage between
thereof deal with statutory incapacities viz., marriage between persons within prohibited degrees of relationship, or subsistence of earlier' marriage which makes a marriage void ... deceased wife's sister and thus came within the prohibited degrees under the personal law of Roman Catholics and a dispensation from the proper
marginal note to Section 88 that the parties are " within prohibited degrees" of consanguinity or impediments of a like absolute character such ... provide that the law applicable to such absolute prohibition of any marriage between parties as prohibited degrees of consanguinity or affinity was not the personal