Example sentences of "[prep] the [adj] court under " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 By the end of the fifteenth century Louis XII was already using French in his letters to other monarchs ( the only significant exception was Poland , whose ruler he wrote to in Latin ) , while at the same time it was the language of the imperial court under Maximilian I. The century or more which followed saw a tendency for it to be used increasingly as the language of diplomacy .
2 Hambros Jersey 's contention , if correct , would mean that the jurisdiction of the English court under the sections would be much more restricted than the circumstances in which an individual may be adjudged bankrupt or a company may be wound up by the English court .
3 The power of the High Court under [ section 37(1) ] to grant an interlocutory injunction restraining a party to any proceedings from removing from the jurisdiction of the High Court , or otherwise dealing with , assets located within that jurisdiction shall be exercisable in cases where that party is , as well as in cases where he is not , domiciled , resident or present within that jurisdiction .
4 Matters previous transferred from the High Court under s 42 may be transferred back to the High Court ( s 42(4) ) .
5 The notice of appeal sets out a number of grounds , but before dealing with the appeal on the merits , I was asked at the outset to rule on what the nature of an appeal from the justices under the Children Act 1989 is , whether it is an appeal in which fresh evidence could be called , that is a full rehearing in the sense that the Crown Court could hear appeals from the juvenile court under the old law .
6 According to the federation , the offending wording had not been corrected and so the organisation began legal proceedings in the Federal Court under the Trade Practices Act .
7 Where the local authority is of the opinion that summary proceedings provide an inadequate remedy , for example , where a fine will have little effect in persuading the odour emitter to abate the odour , or where summary action has failed , or is unacceptable due to the availability of the defence of best practicable means , proceedings may be taken in the High Court under s.100 of the Public Health Act 1936 , even though the local authority has not itself suffered any damage , provided the odour amounts to a statutory nuisance .
8 Alternative action in the High Court under s.100 of the 1936 Act requires no such permission but uncertainty as to whether the defence of best practicable means is available to such an action is a further deterrent to local authorities contemplating taking action under this section .
9 In October 1991 , the Equal Opportunities Commission unsuccessfully challenged these hours thresholds in the High Court under a Judicial Review .
10 Once a bankruptcy order is made , it is likely that the proceedings commenced by a Government department in the High Court under r 6.9(1) ( o ) will be transferred to the appropriate county court if the debtor does not reside or carry on business within the London insolvency district .
11 They are now made in the High Court under s33(2) ( i ) of the Supreme Court Act 1981 and in the county court under s52(2) of the County Courts Act 1984 .
12 The companies appealed to the High Court under s 53 , TMA 1970 , contending that the penalties were excessive .
13 I hold that on an appeal to the High Court under the Children Act 1989 the only findings of fact and the only reasons that may be relied on to support the decision of the justices under appeal , are those announced by the justices in accordance with rule 21 .
14 There is jurisdiction for actions valued at less than £50,000 to be transferred up to the High Court under ss41(1) or 42(2) of the County Courts Act 1984 , although such transfers are likely to occur only in exceptional cases raising questions of general public interest .
15 For example , in the Shove case , the sum awarded by the High Court under the first two headings in the above list alone amounted to £7300 : not a trifling amount .
  Next page