Example sentences of "[subord] [art] company is " in BNC.

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1 In general , where the company is obliged to pay ex gratia amounts in excess of the legal minimum , the full cost of the redundancy payments including the legal minimum should normally be provided .
2 Employees are unlikely to decide whether or not to move with their firm if they do not know when the move is taking place ; where the company is moving to ; who is affected ; what are the financial inducements to relocate ( if any ) ; what are the redundancy terms for those eligible for them who stay behind ; what are the medium and long-term prospects of the job in the new location ; and many other points of concern .
3 But perhaps the best example of Picks System 's idiosyncratic development style is happening in the MD-DOS world , where the company is beta-testing multi-user Pick for MD-DOS — to be released later this year .
4 British Telecommunications Plc says it is to complete its cable television network in the Westminster district of London by 1995 under undertakings given to the government as part of a review of its licence for the area : some 120,000 homes in Westminster , the only area in the UK where the company is licensed to offer television service over its phone network , will have access to the service on completion , Reuter notes ; the company hopes to be allowed to run TV throughout its network from 1997 .
5 The company must register ( or , where the company is already established , re-register ) under the Companies Act 1985 .
6 Where the company is a parent or subsidiary undertaking or where the total directors ' emoluments ( including pension contributions ) is £60,000 or more , the following should be disclosed : emoluments of chairman emoluments of highest paid director if they exceed the emoluments of the chairman the number of directors whose emoluments fall within rising bands of £5,000 .
7 Where the company is a parent or subsidiary undertaking or where the total directors ' emoluments ( including pension contributions ) is £60,000 or more , disclose the number of directors waiving emoluments and the total amount ( including pension contributions ) thereof .
8 Implicit is the idea that A has some form of control over B , or at least a strong bargaining position that enables A to score a ‘ victory ’ over B. Companies sometimes have power of this kind over suppliers , as where the company is one of only a limited number of buyers of a supplier 's goods or services , and even to an extent over governments , manifested , for example , in negotiations over subsidies or in successful attempts to dilute the content of regulation .
9 Even where the company is viewed as a purely private phenomenon , however , there is no justification for regarding the quality of management decision making as a matter that is ‘ private ’ in relation to the shareholders .
10 In contrast , McKinsey says categorically , invest where the market is attractive and where the company is strong .
11 Where the company is listed on The Stock Exchange the protection afforded shareholders is greater than under the Act .
12 However , the appointment of a receiver must not be equated with that of a liquidator : ( i ) where a receiver is appointed the company need not go into liquidation and if it does the same person who acted as receiver will normally not be appointed liquidator ; ( ii ) liquidation is a class action designed to protect the interests of the unsecured creditors whereas , as we shall see , receivership is designed to protect the interests of the security holders who appointed the receiver and it is for this reason that a receiver can be appointed even where the company is in liquidation ; ( iii ) liquidation terminates the trading power of the company whereas this is not the case with receivership ; ( iv ) a liquidator has power to disclaim onerous property , something not possible in the case of receivership ; ( v ) a liquidator in a compulsory winding up is an officer of the court whereas this is not the case with a receiver unless appointed by the court ; ( vi ) lastly , it is easier to obtain recognition of liquidation as opposed to receivership in proceedings in foreign courts .
13 Where the company is seeking general authority to purchase shares in the market they must state their intentions regarding the authority granted .
14 I see Tencel as something where the company is at its best .
15 ‘ The black and white approach used in this country , where a company is either wholly in the public sector or wholly in the private sector , is not mirrored on the Continent .
16 This often occurs where a company is paying significant dividends from profits earned overseas .
17 Where a company is limited by guarantee , the extent of the member 's liability is the amount which he or she has pledged to guarantee the company in the event of liquidation .
18 Section 188(1) of the Insolvency Act 1986 requires that where a company is in liquidation , every business document on which the name of the company appears must state that the company is being wound up .
19 Where a company is accused of a crime the acts and intentions of those who are the directing minds and will of the company are to be attributed to the company .
20 Where a company is accused of a crime the acts and intentions of those who are the directing minds and will of the company are to be attributed to the company .
21 This provision overcomes the difficulty mentioned above that where a company is ceasing to trade there is no justifying rationale for such payments because there is no future flow of profits that present ‘ generosity ’ to employees might help increase .
22 However , where a company is involved in small works or renovation of existing buildings , it may be essential .
23 It has long been the case that where a company is would up by the court , the liquidation is deemed to commence at the date of presentation of the petition .
24 These require that where a company is charged , the mental state ( i.e. of knowledge or recklessness ) must be proved to have existed in the mind of a person who was or formed part of the directing mind of the company .
25 Where a company is engaged in more than one kind of business , it is not unusual for significant differences to arise from year to year between the separate segments .
26 Dillon LJ quoted in West Mercia Safetywear Ltd ( in liq ) v Dodd [ 1988 ] BCLC 250 the following passage from Kinsela v Russell Kinsela Pty Ltd ( in liq ) ( 1986 ) 4 NSWLR 722 : where a company is insolvent the interests of the creditors intrude .
27 Where a company is registered in Scotland a summons may be served on it by leaving it at , or by sending it by post to , its principal place of business in England or Wales addressed to the manager or head officer and by further posting a copy to the registered office ( s 725(2) and ( 3 ) Companies Act 1985 ) .
28 Where a company is controlled by its directors , its expansion strategy may outgrow the resources of its directors so that they can not maintain their percentage holding through a series of costly rights issues or placings , with a consequential dilution of that holding .
29 Last night Ford declined to comment on the long-awaited Jaguar/GM statement although the company is expected to respond shortly .
30 Although the company is still in the red with a net loss of £100m , the outcome was only half as bad as some analysts had expected .
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