Example sentences of "[be] [verb] by the court " in BNC.
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1 | Mr Harris also said ‘ with absolute certainty ’ that any adverse findings by the JDS would have been overturned by the courts . |
2 | On issue the place , date and time of hearing are completed by the court and , unless service is to be effected by the court , a copy of the application duly sealed will be available for service to be effected by the party issuing the application . |
3 | Some support for her position has recently been given by the Court of Appeal in Olugboja . |
4 | The distinction is explicable on the basis that directorship has not been regarded by the courts as a profession , and hence a director is not expected to satisfy a higher standard , for example that of the reasonably competent business manager , simply by virtue of holding office . |
5 | Last night Liverpool council commented in a statement : ‘ These matters have now been resolved by the courts after one of the most thorough investigations ever undertaken into any council 's affairs . ’ |
6 | We will be tracing its pervasive effects below , firstly in relation to the largely untrammelled sentencing powers that have traditionally been enjoyed by the courts in England , and secondly in inhibiting policy initiatives that have sought to substitute an element of strategic planning for the policy vacuum that continues to characterize the English sentencing system . |
7 | In the second case , the Law Lords reinstated a £12,000 damages award which had been cancelled by the Court of Appeal . |
8 | They have also been attacked by the courts , with the result that it is difficult to see what practical effect such clauses might be thought to have . |
9 | The question of justifiability has been considered by the courts in a number of employment cases , where it has been construed most recently as meaning that the discriminatory effect of the requirement or condition must be weighed against its ‘ reasonable necessity ’ for the purposes of the business enterprise in question . |
10 | No case of this kind has ever been considered by the courts before , and I do not think the dicta in the previous cases should be read as excluding a case of this kind where a landlord seeks , by a course of intimidation , to " annul his own deed " , to contradict his own demise , by ousting the tenant from possession which the landlord has conferred upon her . |
11 | The liability of club officials for injuries sustained by club members on the club 's premises has recently been considered by the Court of Appeal . |
12 | I have suggested already that neither assurances , nor probably even ‘ Declarations ’ , are deemed by the Court of Justice to affect the law as defined by the Treaty of Rome , as amended . |
13 | Children are also taken into care when they are committed by the courts under the 1969 Children and Young Persons Act . |
14 | Children who are committed by the courts to the care of the local authority can not , of course , be taken home by their parents whenever they wish . |
15 | While the Panel does not fall squarely within this category of body , its activities are considered by the courts to be sufficiently similar so as to be subject to judicial review . |
16 | Most of the workers concerned had or would have been deemed by the courts to have had contracts of employment . |
17 | It has been said by the courts that there are good reasons of public policy to enforce such time-limits : public programmes ought not to be suspended or held up indefinitely for fear of a challenge at some later date . |
18 | To the extent that statutory changes were necessitated by these recommendations , they have largely been made by the Courts and Legal Service Act 1990 , Part I. Consequently , the relationship between the jurisdiction and procedure of the county courts and High Court will change over the next few years . |
19 | This is the basis of section 3 of the Act which , of course , only applies after an order has been made by the court for the taking of evidence . |
20 | ( 2 ) A taxing officer taxing a bill of costs in accordance with a direction under paragraph ( 1 ) shall have the same powers , and the same fee shall be payable in connection with the taxation , as if an order for taxation of the costs had been made by the court . |
21 | Commentary : where an offender is dealt with for a breach of a community service order , he must be sentenced ( if the order is revoked ) in a manner in which he could have been sentenced by the court which made the order , if he is in breach of a probation order , the court may sentence the offender as if he had just been convicted of the offence concerned . |
22 | A 19-year-old woman has already been bailed by the court on a handling charge and tomorrow a 22-year-old man will appear in court charged with robbery . |
23 | What effect the provision of a civil remedy under s.61 and 62 of the FSA 1986 for breach of SIB Core Rule 28 ( or a comparable SRO ) is , as yet , too early to tell , but most probably they will have little significant deterrent impact , unless , they are interpreted by the courts in a progressive manner , or , if needs be , amended . |
24 | They are published in authoritative , written form and , as acts of Parliament , are interpreted by the courts . |
25 | FORD had been formed on Aug. 2 by six opposition leaders including former Vice-President Jaramogi Oginga Odinga , whose attempt in February to form a political party [ see p. 37995 ] had been thwarted by the courts . |
26 | How has the ‘ reasonable man ’ test been interpreted by the courts ? |
27 | Moreover , there remains the failure to refer to the lukewarm approach of the House of Lords to the Barras principle , the presumption that when Parliament continues to use a word which has been interpreted by the courts it intends the word to continue to have the judicial meaning , but the author can no doubt contend that the doctrine has been given a new lease of life by the Court of Appeal in EWP Ltd v. Moore , and A-G v. Brotherton . |
28 | The words in section 2(1) ‘ transfers or agrees to transfer the property in goods to the buyer ’ have been interpreted by the courts to require that the transfer of ownership to the buyer should be the main object of the agreement . |
29 | However , an amnesty law passed in 1978 , which granted immunity to the perpetrators of human rights violations , has been used by the courts to block full investigations into these cases . |
30 | Forms of particulars of claim are supplied by the court office to parties in person . |