Example sentences of "[art] company as " in BNC.

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1 Certainly he was never again to be as actively interested in the company as he was in the late 1940s .
2 However , difficulties in using online services , as outlined above , have limited their use and they have ‘ not spread through the company as was originally hoped ’ .
3 Conversely , and as the price for treating the company as its own , the dominant undertaking will be liable for the obligations of the company if the company defaults and this seemingly will apply even to preexisting obligations ; however , the dominant undertaking will be able to apply for relief from liability if it did not itself cause the company 's default .
4 The reduced cost of electricity purchased by the company as well as lower inflation is fuelling the £13m of customer refunds .
5 The depôt in Aurelia Road , West Croydon , always referred to by the Company as ‘ Mitcham Road Depôt ’ was built round the cars dumped on the site , by W. Taylor & Co .
6 This is an odd remark , because , when auditors refer to the company as ‘ the client ’ they are not just using a loose colloquialism , they are being legally precise ; the company is the client .
7 Furthermore , in valuing the shares transferred by the taxpayer , the company 's right to the income of the retained part had to be disregarded , since to regard the company as having a beneficial interest in the trust would be inconsistent with the beneficial ownership attributed to the participators .
8 5.1 The Company as beneficial owner hereby assigns to the Publisher the copyright and all rights in the nature of the Work throughout the world in the Work ( including any renewal ) together with any future copyright arising in connection with the Work .
9 On appeal by the company , it was held that the duty of fidelity owed by Fowler and others to the company as former employees was not as great as that owed by an employee during the course of his employment .
10 David Kent , home sales director of Little , Brown , has joined the company 's new board , not the company as stated in Trade Notes of The Bookseller of 18th/25th December .
11 The best people are recognized as readily outside the company as within it .
12 Firstly , it viewed the company as distinct from its shareholders and therefore , unlike the contractual model , it could be seen to support the theory that it was the company which was liable for any debts .
13 Secondly , the fiction/concession theory could have supplied an image of the company as separate and distinct from its shareholders which would also have supported the institution of limited liability , but there were strong reasons for preferring the natural-entity model of the company .
14 The fiction/concession theory saw the company as entirely the creature of the state and therefore potentially accorded to the state the power to regulate and control the company as it saw fit .
15 The fiction/concession theory saw the company as entirely the creature of the state and therefore potentially accorded to the state the power to regulate and control the company as it saw fit .
16 Thus s.309 of the Companies Act 1985 does not regard the interests of the employees and the shareholders of the company as irrecon-cilably opposed , expecting the directors to be able to take the interests of the employees into account whilst performing their duties to the company , including the shareholders .
17 This vision of the company as socially responsible can be interpreted as being very closely linked if not identical to the corporist vision .
18 That belief has to he communicated within the company as well as outside .
19 The objects clause of a memorandum of association will normally be drafted in broad terms to enable the directors to have scope to manage the company as they see fit .
20 To the company as to the stage-coach manager a person is someone who can pay the fare .
21 The concession theory regards the company as owing its existence to an exercise of state power .
22 A different approach to management motivation from that considered so far is adopted by the behavioural school , whose members insist that it is inappropriate to regard the company as engaging in maximising behaviour of any kind , be the maximand profits on the one hand , or growth , or some other determinant of management utility , on the other .
23 They are entitled , in other words , to regard the members ' interest in the company as being in general a continuing one .
24 If this is so , the legal model of the company as so far described needs to be rejected in favour of one which does not explain the rules of company law exclusively in terms of the rights of owners , but which instead regards members and employees as joint stakeholders , each with legitimate demands that the company be run for their benefit .
25 The best way to encourage and promote a controlling interest by employees , who include management personnel employed by the company as well as other staff is to encourage strong competitive bids by management-employee teams .
26 And with that goes , who , who owns the company as well I think .
27 Other litigation between Condy and A. D. Mitchell , who had joined the firm in 1870 , led at first to estrangement and then to reconstitution of the company as Condy & Mitchell Ltd. , with Mitchell and Henry Bollmann 's eldest son , H. J. Bollmann Condy , as managing directors .
28 This led to a debate within the company as to whether the role of ‘ Laura Ashley ’ was to demonstrate the sort of rooms ‘ Mr and Mrs Average ’ might own , decorated only to those standards to which they could aspire , or should it display exotically luxurious settings , thus attaining an often impossibly high level in taste and quality .
29 In spite of its success — the book quickly sold out its first edition of 60,000 — Laura dreaded the thought of another book which failed to represent the company as she saw it .
30 It is the fact that the shareholder has rights in the company as well as against it , which , in legal theory , distinguishes the member from the debenture holder whose rights are also defined by contract ( this time the debenture itself and not the articles ) but are rights against the company and , if the debenture is secured , in its property , but never in the company itself .
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