Example sentences of "it followed that [art] " in BNC.

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1 It followed that no individual should boast of his role ‘ but be thankful that he has been permitted to be useful ’ .
2 It followed that no representation was made as to whether Mr. Bell should be remanded on bail or in custody , nor was the justice asked to form any opinion as to whether Mr. Bell had broken or was likely to break any condition of his bail .
3 It followed that a de facto neutralisation of the Soviet southern flank was a primary strategic objective for the USSR .
4 It followed that the service of the writ was good service .
5 It followed that the husband should identify the tasks his wife could tackle and encourage her to participate in training .
6 It followed that the periods varied in length from season to season and hence the duration of the hours fluctuated .
7 It followed that the selected areas would be large and would include main roads .
8 The Court of Appeal held that as the main purpose of Mr Stark 's contract had merely been the regular and efficient distribution of newspapers and since there was no evidence he should personally engage in distribution , it followed that the contract was not a ‘ contract personally to execute any work or labour ’ and therefore Mrs Gunning was not employed under such a contract .
9 It followed that the employer was entitled to dismiss him when he refused to go to a new site and was justified in refusing him redundancy pay .
10 Clearly this would only be the case if the company was perceived as an entity distinct from its shareholders so that it followed that the company and not the shareholders would be liable for any debts .
11 The Court of Appeal held that because the principle of effective protection only required that national courts should provide remedies for the protection of European rights which were as effective as the remedies available for the protection of similar rights in English law ; and since a plaintiff can recover damages against governmental bodies in English law only if a breach of private law can be shown ; and since the challenged action would not be actionable in tort in English law ; it followed that the principle of effective protection did not require that damages be available to the plaintiff as a remedy .
12 It followed that the proper jurisdictional limits were the same as those applying to subpoenas , which can not be addressed to persons outside the United Kingdom .
13 Combining these two propositions , it followed that the task of nineteenth-century liberalism was confined to the creation of a free market in land by the abolition of entail , and the sale of the church estates and the common lands .
14 It followed that the Court of Appeal could not substitute a term of three years ' detention under Children and Young Persons Act 1933 , s.53(2) , despite the fact that that sentence would have been available to the sentencer in the Crown Court , as there was an effective sentence in place .
15 It followed that the House had to consider afresh the principles upon which the court ought to exercise its discretion whether to require an undertaking in damages from the Crown .
16 It followed that the conditions introduced by the Act of 1988 , whose sole object and effect was to support the Common Fisheries Policy , were not discriminatory .
17 H's purpose , however , was to punish the tenant for having given evidence ( under subpoena ) in an action brought against him by another of his tenants and it followed that the landlord was guilty of a criminal contempt of court .
18 It followed that the cells responsible for the habituation must lie centrally , within the sensory-motor interconnections in the abdominal ganglion .
19 Because they had taught a topic , it followed that the children had learned it .
20 Since real output could also change only slowly over time in response to changes in aggregate demand , it followed that the rate of monetary growth would in the long run be correlated with the rate of inflation .
21 It followed that the interference by the English courts did not correspond to a social need sufficiently pressing to outweigh the public interest in freedom of expression .
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