Example sentences of "the [noun] as to [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Some of the prize designs being in Italian architecture and some in Gothic , your Committee particularly directed its inquiries to the question whether ( apart from considerations of taste ) either style had the advantage as to cheapness , commodiousness of arrangement , or facilities for light and ventilation .
2 Section 61(1) of the Criminal Justice Act 1967 makes it clear that the decision as to release on licence is for the Home Secretary , although he is obliged to consult the judiciary .
3 In the Magistrates ' Court the decision as to verdict and sentence is entirely for the Justices acting on the advice of their Clerk , and of course it is erm true to say that generally speaking Justices will follow the advice of their Clerk , but they do n't have to .
4 We reach this conclusion in the light of the evidence that notwithstanding the rules as to dismissal for theft as applied in the first place … each case can be and is reviewed on the intervention of the security officer who … will make an appropriate recommendation where the case does not warrant dismissal . ’
5 The rules as to disclosure , participation and voting do not apply to an interest in a contract or other matter which a member may have as a ratepayer or inhabitant of the area , or as an ordinary consumer of water , or to an interest in any matter relating to the terms on which the right to participate in any service , including the supply of goods , is offered to the public .
6 While the rules as to admissibility do not apply , the value of any particular evidence , and the weight to be given to it , will be the same in arbitration as in hearings in open court .
7 For the rules as to jurisdiction in relation to bankruptcy proceedings including debtors ' petitions , see Chapter 1 , Sections 2 and 3 .
8 Notable differences were to be found in the rules as to succession on intestacy and in the variety of estates and interests which could be created in these two kinds of property .
9 It was a foolhardy decision : these formations arrived too late in the east to affect events there , but their transfer so weakened the German thrust in the west as to make material success in that theatre improbable .
10 If in the latter case the seller supplies staves between half an inch and nine-sixteenths of an inch thick , he is in breach of the condition as to description , Arcos v. Ronaasen ( 1933 H.L. ) .
11 The sellers were in breach of the condition as to description .
12 Here , the sellers were not in breach of the condition as to description since , unlike Pinnocks case , there was no addition of goods outside the contractual description .
13 The buyers sued the sellers under section 12 claiming a breach of the condition as to title and a breach of the warranty of quiet possession .
14 It was held that there had been no breach of the condition as to title because that condition related to the time of the sale .
15 Provided that the customer is aware that his agent will be remunerated in this way , does not make further enquiry , and is not misled by the agent as to amount , the agent does not have to disclose the amount of or basis on which the commission is paid .
16 Section 6(1) of the UCTA states that ( under any contract for the sale or hire purchase of goods , not merely business contracts — see s 6(4) ) liability for breach of the obligations arising from the warranties as to title and quiet possession implied under SGA 1979 , s 12 ( in relation to sale of goods ) and s 8 of the Supply of Goods ( Implied Terms ) Act 1973 ( in relation to goods disposed of on hire purchase ) can not be excluded or restricted by reference to any contract term .
17 The rule as to unsoundness is that if at the time of sale , the horse has any disease which either actually does diminish the natural usefulness of the animal , so as to make him less capable of work of any description of which in its ordinary progress will diminish the natural usefulness of the animal , or if the horse has , either from disease or accident undergone any alterations of structure that either actually does at the time , or in its ordinary effects will , diminish the natural usefulness of the horse , such a horse is unsound . ’
18 Heterosexuality among English writers , it was being implied , was so much the exception to the rule as to demand special treatment .
19 To the extent that the contract leaves these matters undefined , the warranties implied by the SGA as to quality , suitability , and compliance with description or sample will apply .
20 ts As stated above , ss 6(1) and 7(3A) of the UCTA provide that liability for breach of the obligations as to title and quiet possession implied by the SGA and the SGSA can not be excluded or restricted by reference to any contract term .
21 The obligations as to service of committal orders are not the same in the High Court and the county court .
22 But , subject to the limitations as to purpose and effect that I have mentioned , there is no reason , in my opinion , to place any further limitations on the steps that , under section 61(1) , can be directed to be taken .
23 A typical certificate of motor insurance for a haulier is shown below , For administrative reasons , a simple code ( five letters in our example ) is used to state who may drive the vehicle , the limitations as to use and the exclusions from cover .
24 The provision is unlikely to relate as much to the uplands as to lowland areas such as Halvergate Marshes , the Somerset Levels and The Broads .
25 ( 2 ) In determining whether or not there has been compliance with the requirement as to supervision in paragraph ( 1 ) of this rule , account shall be taken of , inter alia , the arrangements for principals to see incoming mail .
26 The relationship between waiver and equitable estoppel is obvious , as Denning LJ pointed out in Charles Rickards Ltd v Oppenheim [ 1950 ] 1 KB 616 ( at p623 ) : If the defendant , as he did , led the plaintiffs to believe that he would not insist on the stipulation as to time , and that , if they carried out the work , he would accept it , and they did it , he could not afterwards set up the stipulation as to the time against them .
27 ( b ) The implied terms as to quality extend to the goods supplied The undertakings as to quality extend not only to the contract goods but also to other goods supplied under the contract , for example , a defective bottle in the case of a supply of ginger beer ( Morelli v Fitch and Gibbons [ 1928 ] 2 KB 638 ) , or mineral water ( Geddling v March [ 1920 ] 1 KB 668 ) .
28 Mr was well aware because he 'd been told by the plaintiffs solicitors that the plaintiffs received terms for cover or to obtain interest on their costs , the plaintiffs solicitors wrote specifically to Mr enquiring was his offer in , in the sum of forty two thousand pounds , that 's er the possible agreed settlement figure for costs , er if it was inclusive or exclusive of interest erm there were some delay but er Mr wrote back in due course making clear that interest was n't included , I should also say that in Mr er proposed bill of costs he had disallowed interest for a fairly short period in respect of both the plaintiffs bill of costs and the defendants bill of costs and the plaintiffs solicitors do n't appear to have erm taken any point on that , but as I say it , the point as to interest was specifically raised by the plaintiffs solicitors letter and er I 'm quite satisfied on the correspondence that they when it came to the matter were seen , were desires of obtaining interest in respect of their costs .
29 Although the assessment of damages often has to be based on scanty evidence , in the opinion of the Board the evidence adduced by the plaintiff as to damage in this case was inadequate to prove any damage beyond the purely nominal .
30 Where the defendant has no defence then , if he is unable to come to an arrangement with the plaintiff as to payment , the court may give him time to pay ( Ord 37 , r 4 ) .
  Next page