Example sentences of "judges ' [noun] be " in BNC.

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1 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 .
2 Also on the judges ' panel were Caroline Baker ( Fashion Director , Mirabella , Lucille Lewin ( Managing Director , Whistles ) , Myrene de Premonville ( Fashion Designer ) and Sebastien de Diesbach ( Promostyl ) .
3 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 .
4 No correspondence about the results can be entered into , and that the judges ' decision is final is a condition of entry .
5 The judges ' decision is final and no correspondence will be entered into .
6 3 Statement that the judges ' decision is final and that no correspondence will be entered into .
7 No correspondence can be entered into and the judges ' decision is final .
8 The judges ' decision is final and no correspondence will be entered into .
9 The judges ' decision is final .
10 The judges ' tariff is now publicly available , from the law reports ( including in particular guideline cases on sentencing for particular crimes ) , and the Encyclopaedia of Current Sentencing Practice .
11 Naturally the judges ' tariff is not writ in stone ; it may and does change over time , so that sentences passed in 1900 are of little or no value in ascertaining the tariff in 1992 .
12 I have already accepted that the judges are the best persons to say what the judges ' tariff is , as Watkins L.J .
13 The touch judges ' flags were on the pitch more often than off it in a game I saw recently here ( in Eastern Province , South Africa ) .
14 In fact in Duru [ 1976 ] 1 WLR 2 the Court of Appeal thought that both charges in relation to the thing in action represented by the cheque and to the paper itself were to be upheld but the judges ' minds were not directed at this issue whether property must exist at the time of the obtaining .
15 At Gloucester in July 1634 the judges ' proceedings were based partly upon the 800 presentments made at the swanimote held in the Forest of Dean in the previous month : 420 of these for unlawfully cutting and selling woods , 260 for illegal inclosures and other encroachments , 80 for taking the king 's game and 10 for unauthorized operation of ironworks .
16 The second interpretation can be arrived at by reading the provision in two parts : ( 1 ) judges ' commissions are to be made for as long as they behave themselves , implying that if they misbehave they may be dismissed by the Crown ; ( 2 ) they may be removed by the Crown on an Address of both Houses , even though they have not misbehaved themselves .
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