Example sentences of "appeal [conj] [art] house " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 There was no decision of the Court of Appeal or the House of Lords on the point .
2 Since 1977 , no judge sitting in the High Court , or the Court of Appeal or the House of Lords ( as a Law Lord ) had formerly been a Member of the House of Commons .
3 For an appeal to the House of Lords , either the Court of Appeal or the House of Lords must give leave .
4 The majority will be settled by agreement , but an appeal process , first to Valuation Tribunals through the Lands Tribunal , and thence to the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords on matters of law , is available .
5 Actions start in the High Court and cases may also go to the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords .
6 The criteria which seem to be applied by both the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords in deciding whether leave should be granted are ( Blom-Cooper and Drewry , 1972 ) :
7 Another survey , published in 1975 , covers the period 1876–1972 and , with a few omissions , analyses the 317 judges who sat in the High Court , the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords during that period .
8 Inevitably , given the system of promotion , the average age is highest in the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords , at about sixty-five and sixty-eight years respectively .
9 Legislation since 1979 has greatly affected industrial relations , often in line with the expressed views of the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords .
10 Both the ruling itself and the judicial reasoning adopted by the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords exemplify what is meant by the politics of the judiciary .
11 The Divisional Court of the Queen 's Bench Division which first heard the action refused Bromley 's application but the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords upheld it and quashed the precept and so the scheme .
12 Kerr LJ said that some of the public comments on Bromley v. GLC gave the misleading impression that the judgments in the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords were designed to thwart the wishes of the majority on the GLC for political motives .
13 This reinforces the view that what upset the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords in Bromley v. GLC was , above all , the way in which the Labour majority went about implementing their election promises rather than their statutory powers to do so .
14 But both the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords supported the Minister , Lord Keith saying that the judgments in the Divisional Court illustrated the danger of judges wrongly , though unconsciously , substituting their own views for the views of the decision-maker who alone was charged and authorized by Parliament to exercise a discretion .
15 These cases illustrate the importance which the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords attached to the need not to constrain the Commission and the Office of Fair Trading within narrow bounds and to emphasize the width of their discretionary powers .
16 But the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords supported the local authority .
17 The exception merely illustrates the general defence , volenti non fit injuria , and would not need special mention here but for the fact that the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords have considered it expedient to take particular notice of it .
18 This has not been demonstrated in Britain ; first , because of the lack of judicial review of statutes in Britain , policy issues ( politics ) are often not as self-evidently present as they are in the United States and , second , in the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords where more than one judge sits , panels of judges change , whereas in the United States Supreme Court the same panel of nine judges hears all cases .
19 It is a curious phenomenon , often noticed , that the temper and philosophy of the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords are seldom in accord — New Statesman .
20 Both the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords held that damages should have been assessed on the basis of the known fact that the plaintiff would in any event have been totally incapable of work as a result of spinal disease from 1976 .
21 His decision was upheld by the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords .
22 The procedure was known as " case stated " : it allowed appeals to the court on points of law , and sometimes resulted in an arbitration being followed by three further rounds of litigation in the High Court , the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords .
23 Lord Lane said another division of the court had then felt powerless to intervene and hear new grounds of appeal because the House of Lords had restored Berry 's conviction after an earlier successful appeal .
  Next page