Example sentences of "the judges [unc] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Sealed with the papal leaden seal , the bulla or bull , it was the authority for the judges ' actions , outlining any specific points which needed to be brought to their attention , informing them in some cases of the law and declaring their actual powers . |
2 | The judges ' scoring , however , differed widely . |
3 | In other words , are the Houses the sole judges of the correctness of the judges ' behaviour , or not ? |
4 | He said the White Paper failed to indicate the Government 's attitude to the judges ' response to the Green Papers . |
5 | I could ask for a trial , but I was not confident of the judges ' honesty . |
6 | John O'Loan , head of Sky News , received the judges ' award because they ‘ noted the increasing significance of Sky News as a contributor to the journalistic mix ’ . |
7 | But the bill sets out a tight framework which will limit the judges ' scope for blocking extra advocacy rights for solicitors . |
8 | I therefore reject the argument on behalf of the appellants in this case , that the Home Secretary is obliged to follow the judges ' views as to the requirements of retribution and deterrence in mandatory life sentence cases , even though it allowed some exceptions . |
9 | This depends on the judges ' views of the merits of the case before them or ( I would add ) the direction their political inclinations lead them — what I call below their ‘ view of the public interest ’ . |
10 | Out of this rather extreme position developed a more moderate line , involving the notion of a caution , first formalized in the Judges ' Rules in 1912 , and finding expression today in the Code of Practice for the Detention , Treatment and Questioning of Persons by Police Officers ( Home Office , 1985c ) . |
11 | In making specific recommendations on the wording and application of the Judges ' Rules and other matters , Fisher observed cautiously , but correctly : |
12 | before PACE , to exclude evidence obtained in breach of the Judges ' Rules . |
13 | This leads to the applicant 's second ground for supporting the judgment under appeal , namely that whatever the words of the Act may mean , they must be understood as qualified by a tacit exception , preserving the ancient right of silence in its particular manifestation of the immunity from being asked questions after charge , previously embodied in the Judges ' Rules and carried forward into paragraph 16.5 of Code C. |
14 | 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 ) . |
15 | It was not , however , until the Judges ' Rules were revised in 1964 that the protection was related to the moment when the charge was laid ; and as we have seen , the moment at which it attaches has now by Code C been further advanced . |
16 | 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 . |
17 | The judges ' function is also to do justice in accordance with certain settled principles of law in a free society ; and they are entitled to assume that Parliament does not intend to subvert these principles , unless there is a clear statement that it does . |
18 | His hopes of victory rose after a health authority QC appeared to concede , in answer to the judges ' questions , that regulations requiring consultations to take place had not been properly complied with . |
19 | Solicitors feared the judges ' veto might result in rules limiting their new rights , but the bill lays down a tight framework which will restrict the room for manoeuvre . |
20 | The judges ' pay increase was hung round the Government 's neck like a heavy stone . |
21 | However , when one comes to the duty to provide and ordain suitable trained attorneys and lawyers to equip the courts , the judges ' performance of that duty , in so far as it related to the provision of trained advocates , was executed through the relationship they developed with the Inns of Court . |
22 | 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 ) . |
23 | The judges ' case for Vichy as an ‘ authoritarian ’ régime rests on the old argument of German pressure and French passivity . |
24 | The first entry drawn after the closing date which matches the judges ' decision will win . |
25 | It failed to strike me immediately , and I questioned the judges ' decision — replacing it with one of the entries to the three veneers class . |
26 | 4 All entries will be judged by a panel of judges appointed by Haymarket Motoring Publications Ltd. 5 The judges ' decision will be final and no correspondence will be entered into . |
27 | The judges ' decision aroused as much popular interest as the exhibition . |
28 | The judges ' decision can therefore be seen as an attempt by enlightened amateurs to retain their position as arbiters of taste in the face of these threats , by sponsoring a style of architecture which they felt would be an appropriate form of building in Victorian England . |
29 | On 2nd July he had criticized the organization of the competition and the judges ' decision to award only one prize to each competitor . |
30 | 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 . |