Example sentences of "right of [noun sg] [prep] the [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 This is required by law a ) to maintain the private status of the ground , b ) to preserve the Vicar 's freehold rights of ownership ( and those of his successors ) and c ) to prevent the creation of a Right of Way through the grounds .
2 We soon learned to give animals the right of way in the swamps , sitting for hours at a time in the dugout , watching elephants plod by .
3 The powers were given in The Local Government Act 1988 , which enables the auditor to issue a prohibition order which , subject to a right of appeal to the courts , precludes the authority from implementing such a decision .
4 If the action of the authority is thought to be ultra vires there is also a right of appeal to the courts .
5 It is through the implementation of this agreed machinery that disciplinary tribunals and the Inns themselves , with the consent of the Lord Chief Justice , are now able to exercise extended powers of control over the professional conduct of barristers , with a wider range of penalties , but subject always , in the case of decisions by tribunals , to a right of appeal to the visitors : see Disciplinary Tribunal Regulations 1990 , regulations 22 and 30 .
6 Where the decision is adverse to the claimant , information about the right of appeal to the Commissioners must be given .
7 There is no right of appeal against the Commissioners decision , but the possibility of judicial review is available .
8 What is at issue in this case is the taking up , on a self-employed basis , of activities in the fisheries sector and the pursuit of those activities , in other words , the right of establishment in the fisheries sector .
9 In Golder , the European Court decided that Article 6 embodied an inherent obligation on States to grant a right of access to the courts :
10 In relation to other areas of the public sector , it seems somewhat inequitable that the C & AG has no right of access to the records of nationalized industries , given that government can regulate certain of their activities ; for example , pricing policy , funding restrictions and trading restrictions .
11 There was no right of recourse to the courts in respect of suspension and refusal of listing and no right in respect of cancellation .
12 As the eighteenth century went on the combination of the two into " envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary " became the most usual way of designating diplomatic representatives of the second rank , those below that of ambassador but still having the right of audience with the rulers to whom they were accredited .
13 ‘ Both were using it in the sense that , in regard to the Inns , the judges over a long period , from time to time , had concurred in the Inns performing the duty of selecting those persons who were fit and proper persons to be called to the Bar and to be entitled to a right of audience in the courts and the duty of suspending or prohibiting such persons from practice .
14 Sir Nicolas Browne-Wilkinson described this submission as ‘ plainly ill founded ’ and said that it was ‘ no answer to the S.I.B . 's claim against the solicitors that an individual investor would have no right of action against the solicitors . ’
15 For if the right of self-determination for the Finns , the Ukrainians and the rest could in practice threaten the very existence of the Soviet State , ‘ naturally the preservation of the Socialist Republic has a higher claim ’ .
16 The new party is also dedicated to ‘ fighting for the right of self-determination of the Tamils and Muslims ’ and ‘ protecting and preserving the geographical identity and integrity of the traditional homelands of the Tamils and Muslims ’ .
17 Unlike the DFR , the CKR contained a ‘ no disposal ’ ( ’ no disp ’ ) clause , in which the shipper waived his right of disposal of the goods while in transit .
18 ‘ ( 1 ) The unpaid seller of goods loses his lien or right of retention in respect of them ( a ) when he delivers the goods to a carrier or other bailee or custodier for the purpose of transmission to the buyer without reserving the right of disposal of the goods ; ( b ) when the buyer or his agent lawfully obtains possession of the goods , ( c ) by waiver of the lien or right of retention . ’
19 Section 19 provides that , if the seller reserves a right of disposal of the goods until certain conditions are fulfilled , property does not pass until those conditions are fulfilled .
20 This is usually enshrined in the Articles by attaching the right of appointment to the investors ' equity shares .
21 Edward I also became involved with the Scots by claiming the right of arbitration between the rivals for the Scottish throne , at the end of 1290 , and he installed a puppet government in the lowlands of Scotland and carried off the traditional coronation stone from Scone , transporting it to Westminster .
22 It suggested that second marriages would substantially infringe the rights of inheritance of the members of the first family .
23 He endowed it with vast lands and rights , including tithes of silver and other rights of tribute from the Slavs .
24 It is not , however , necessary that the defendant should assert rights of ownership over the goods : taking for the purposes of acquiring a lien or of temporary use have been held to be conversion .
25 Too simple a judgment perhaps : it might better be said that , manifested as the Consumers ' Movement , Co-operation had become an alternative presentation of the rights of ownership against the rights of labour , while trade unionism existed to assert the rights of labour against those of ownership .
26 Lord Donaldson attacked the White Paper 's suggestion that it might be in the public interest to allow other professions , such as accountants , to be given rights of audience in the courts .
27 Employed lawyers should also be entitled to rights of audience in the courts .
28 ‘ although in the Act of 1990 Parliament introduced a new statutory machinery for supervising and regulating the rules for education and conduct for those who are to have rights of audience in the courts it decided not to interfere expressly with the jurisdiction of the Inns , under the supervision of the judges , to decide who were fit and proper persons to be admitted to the Inns for training or their liberty to decide the criteria which should dictate their admissions policy .
29 Along with that , although solicitors have been given limited rights of audience in the courts , seriously complex cases still require specialised counsel and these are in short supply : ‘ You only need one Piper Alpha inquiry and they 'll be tied up for months ’ , he said .
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