Example sentences of "to be [vb pp] [prep] the court " in BNC.

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1 Under Ord 50 , r 4A where under the rules a document is to be prepared by the court , that document may , if the proper officer so allows , be prepared by the plaintiff ( or applicant ) and , where a document is so produced the plaintiff is not required also to file a request but must provide a sufficient number of copies of the document for the court 's use .
2 However , where a defendant does not reside or carry on business within the district of the court and he desires the action to be transferred to the court for the district in which he resides or carries on business , he may , after delivering a defence , counterclaim , or request for time for payment , apply ex parte in writing for an order to transfer the action to that court .
3 The case had first to be heard in the court of the seneschal of Aquitaine , or ‘ court of Gascony ’ as it was entitled .
4 Lord Ross added : ‘ This appears to me to emphasise that there is both importance and difficulty in this action which would make it appropriate for the action to be heard in the Court of Session as the supreme court rather than in the sheriff court .
5 The Commission 's opinion was due to be presented to the Court of Human Rights in 1991 .
6 The prosecution 's evidence does not have to be presented to the court all over again .
7 He further ordered the original bills of lading dated 29 January 1991 relating to the cargo to be deposited with the court .
8 ‘ The first question to be decided by the court is whether on the undisputed or incontrovertible facts there appears to be a question deserving fuller investigation and whether it might reasonably be held on the substantive hearing that it would be in the interests of the child for a ‘ residence order ’ to be made .
9 Letters were then drawn up to be enrolled at the Court of Chancery so we would have the necessary licence to trade .
10 Although proposals for secret ballots and annual elections came to nothing , a Triennial Bill was passed into law in 1694 , whilst in 1696 Acts were passed to prevent electoral charges and expenses ( to keep the price of a contest within the gentry 's means ) and to prevent local changes in the established franchise ( which were generally thought to be made to the Court 's advantage ) .
11 Without that provision , either the appointing authority will have to be persuaded to act and the other party persuaded to drop its objections , or an application would have to be made to the court for a declaration as to whether the reference should proceed .
12 If such application was to be made to the court I feel that further references to your business acumen would have to be supplied beforehand .
13 If the application is urgent , eg for a non-molestation injunction under the Domestic Violence and Matrimonial Proceedings Act 1976 and there is no judge sitting , the court office will say at what court there is a judge and the application may be made and heard at that court , but the more usual practice is for the application itself to be made in the court which would otherwise have been appropriate , with the papers and order being sent back to that court after the hearing .
14 The House of Lords broke the deadlock by ordering an inquiry to be conducted by the court into the value of the reversions : it did not order the lessors to appoint a valuer .
15 In this connection it is worth noting that in another context , and in another part of the same Act , Parliament has made express provision for cases in which the suitability of particular accommodation is to be determined by the court in the course of ordinary litigation .
16 Later , in the Court of Appeal , Lord Donaldson , Master of the Rolls , refused a stay in the order pending an appeal , but agreed to allow the notes to be given to the court in a sealed envelope , to be returned unopened if the appeal succeeded .
17 Seven days notice of the application has to be given to the court and to the police .
18 What had to be demonstrated to the court was that the delay complained of had produced genuine prejudice and unfairness .
19 How widely this reservation is to be applied in practice has sooner or later to be defined by the Court of Justice .
20 Notice of service ( N 222 ) is to be sent by the court office to the plaintiff when a default summons is served by the court ( Ord 7 , r 21 ) .
21 I think I left the Bench at least with an impression that they had someone very special to deal with , I was , of course , all the time praying that no one for the police would ask for his Conduct Sheet , which they overlooked after making a dutiful response to the Bench , and I hurried away to be met outside the Court by Stewart , who at once asked me to lend him a pound .
22 The 28 days for Courtney 's case to be referred to the Court of Appeal runs out on Monday .
23 Since 1979 the courts have ruled that review and appeal are available only where certain standard forms of contract need to be interpreted by the court or an award is plainly and seriously wrong : see Jaffe in ( 1989 ) Arbitration vol 55 , p184 .
24 If an expert clause is unclear , it may have to be clarified by the court .
25 ( S. ) 65 ) that the Court of Appeal is less likely to be persuaded to quash the compensation order in such cases , where the offender in the Crown Court has caused specific information relating to his finances to be put before the court .
26 It is , however , by no means certain that such a limitation was intended to be introduced by the Court of Appeal .
27 On issue the place , date and time of hearing are completed by the court and , unless service is to be effected by the court , a copy of the application duly sealed will be available for service to be effected by the party issuing the application .
28 The current law on speaking and non-speaking decisions is to be found in the Court of Appeal 's judgment in Jones v Sherwood Computer Services plc [ 1991 ] NPC 60 .
29 In R v Inner London Juvenile Court , ex pG [ 1988 ] FCR 316 , Bush J held that the child 's welfare was a matter to be considered by the court and balanced against the risk of prejudice to the accused .
30 but the second way in which section fourteen arises is this slightly more oblique way , erm , it 's , it 's not really the question of competition law it 's more a question of administrative law or constitutional law , erm whether it arises on the question er , your Lordship will have to decide , but , if , if it does then we believe that our case is extremely strong , because what one is saying here is , is section fourteen a block to an article eighty five action , erm does it make it either virtually impossible or something lesser excessively difficult , er and we say er that that 's one aspect and two can we show it 's discriminatory , well we say first of all it is discriminatory because even on analysis of the bad faith argument they are putting in a claimant with an article eighty five case to an extraordinary length in order to make good his case , he first of all has to super declaration presumably that he is entitled to damages , but he ca n't get damages all he 's entitled to is the declaration if then do n't satisfy that claim by paying up and their not going to be ordered by the court to pay up because that 's a claim for damages and you ca n't have that then you have to sue them again on the basis of breach of bad faith , er no other provision in English law would go to that effect and that of course even , even that assumes whether rightly or wrongly and we say possibly wrongly that er , er the failure to comply with the judgment of the declaration would be bad faith within the meaning of the act , but even assuming it 's right it puts a plaintiff suing for breach of article eighty five in the worst position possible
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