Example sentences of "of [art] judges ' " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 A surrender to the farmers over the egg controversy , hesitancy in confronting the brewers , and some retreat in the face of the judges ' opposition to legal reform indicated that there were lobbies and vested interests which even the all-conquering Prime Minister could not challenge with impunity .
2 The appeal court took the view that a speaker must take the audience as he or she finds it — this contradicted Beatty v. Gillbanks and revived all the fears about ‘ mob rule ’ which had been to the forefront of the judges ' minds in that case .
3 Hall 's positive views about the timing of the judges ' appointments probably originated as early as 1835 , when the plans for the new Houses of Parliament were being considered .
4 It was critical of the judges ' decision to award only one prize to each competitor , and pointed out that there was nothing in the conditions which debarred the same competitor from receiving prizes in more than one of the three parts of the competition .
5 In making specific recommendations on the wording and application of the Judges ' Rules and other matters , Fisher observed cautiously , but correctly :
6 before PACE , to exclude evidence obtained in breach of the Judges ' Rules .
7 The practice does not , however , appear to have been universal , as witness the embarrassing conflict of judicial opinion recorded in the brief history of the Judges ' Rules which forms the introduction to the 1964 revision of the rules ( see Practice Note ( Judges ' Rules ) [ 1964 ] 1 W.L.R. 152 ) .
8 Certain observations by the Royal Commission , notably concerning an apparent conflict between rules 3 and 7 of the Judges ' Rules as they then stood , led the Home Secretary to seek the advice of the judges .
9 I note also that of the judges who expressed opinions to the House of Lords Select Committee on Murder and Life Imprisonment about this issue , a majority favoured immediate disclosure of the judges ' recommendation as to the tariff .
10 dealt with the status of the judges ' advice in these terms , at p. 82 :
11 We have been shown a large number of the judges ' orders which are reproduced in Dugdale 's Origines Juridiciales , 3rd ed. ( 1680 ) , ch. 70–72 .
12 We are very willing to accept that those parts of the judges ' visitorial jurisdiction which were not incident to the administration of justice in the courts passed down through the routes suggested by Sir William and Professor Baker , but in the context of the present case , where the court has for the first time to inquire into the particular function which is being performed , we are not satisfied that the whole of the visitorial jurisdiction passed by this route .
13 I could ask for a trial , but I was not confident of the judges ' honesty .
14 In other words , are the Houses the sole judges of the correctness of the judges ' behaviour , or not ?
15 This dispute emphasises the ambiguity of the judges ' position .
16 This is further compounded by the peculiarities of the judges ' work situation : they live almost exclusively among other judges and senior barristers and , as one new judge put it , ‘ you have to watch your invitations ’ ( Sunday Times , 5 October 1975 ) .
17 The results of the judges ' deliberations will be made public at an awards dinner arranged by SITE on 16 March .
  Next page