Example sentences of "one party to [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 the income consists of annual payments made under a partnership agreement to or for the benefit of a former partner , or the widow or dependants of a deceased former partner , of the partnership , being payments made under a liability incurred for full consideration ; 2. the income is payable in connection with the acquisition of a partnership ; 3. the income arises under a settlement made by one party to a marriage by way of provision for the other after the dissolution or annulment of the marriage , or while they are separated under an Order of the Court or under a separation agreement or in such circumstances that the separation is likely to be permanent , being income payable to or applicable for the benefit of the other party ; 4. the income is from property of which the settlor has divested himself absolutely by the settlement ; 5. the income is income which under other provisions of the tax legislation is treated for the purposes of the Taxes Acts as that of the settlor .
2 ( a ) The reliefs Section 83 of the Finance Act 1985 made very significant changes to the stamping of documents executed on or after 26 March 1985 where property is conveyed or transferred from one party to a marriage to the other .
3 However , the truncated conveyance would not then be " an instrument by which property is conveyed or transferred from one party to a marriage to the other " within the Finance Act 1985 , s83 and therefore could not be certified by the husband as being within category " H " of the Regulations .
4 ( vii ) Conveyance or transfer to trustees ( by Court order or by agreement ) with no consideration ( Eg Precedents 46 to 49 ) Such a conveyance or transfer falls outside the provisions of s83 ( above ) as it is not a conveyance or transfer from one party to a marriage to the other .
5 Change of control clauses ( commonly found in software licences ) entitle one party to a contract to terminate the contract if there is a change in ownership of the other contracting party or sometimes a change in ownership of the holding company of that contracting party .
6 Where one party to a contract contracts to use certain goods for the purposes of the contract , considerations of title and quiet possession may be irrelevant , but conformity to description , sample , quality and fitness for purpose may well not be .
7 However , the drafter should remember that problems frequently arise where one party to a contract seeks to escape from it on the grounds that the other is in breach of a condition , and that the time for performance of obligations ( other than payment of money ) under a commercial contract is normally " of the essence " : a failure to perform on time in accordance with the contract will therefore justify the other party in terminating the contract ( see Bunge Corpn v Tradax Export SA [ 1981 ] 1 WLR 711 ) .
8 expressed the opinion , concurred in by the other members of the court , that a contractual right of one party to an action to have the costs of the action paid by another party to the action could not override the discretion as to costs given to the court by Ord. 62 , r. 3(2) and section 51(1) of the Act of 1981 , but that where an order for payment of the costs was sought , the discretion should ordinarily be exercised so as to reflect the contractual right .
9 One party to the reference can not challenge the decision by revoking the authority of the expert without the consent of the other party : the purported revocation would be a repudiation of the agreement to refer .
10 This point may sound very obvious , but it is seen to be crucial when one party to the contract is looking for a way to get out of his contractual obligations and is able to seize upon an ill-defined point .
11 As Buckley LJ said in Gillespie v Bowles : it is a fundamental consideration in the construction of contracts of this kind that it is inherently improbable that one party to the contract should intend to absolve the other party from the consequences of the latter 's own negligence .
12 Only where the words used are sufficient to amount to an offer by one party to the other to contract and an acceptance by that other party of the terms of the offer , will a contract be brought about .
13 Interrogatories are questions put by one party to the other about his case which that other party must answer : discovery is a process by which both parties must disclose to each other all documents relevant to the issues , except for documents containing legal advice on the case .
14 It should be appreciated that if one party to the marriage has no wish to occupy the matrimonial home that party is not entitled to register a Class F Land Charge against the owner ( see Barnett v Hassett [ 1981 ] 1 WLR 1385 where the husband left the wife 's house and did not wish to occupy it ) .
15 None of the conveyances which are the subject of this chapter fall within the provisions of s83 of the Finance Act 1985 for they are not conveyances from one party to the marriage to the other .
16 Secondly , s11 of the Inheritance Tax Act 1984 provides that a disposition is not a transfer for value for inheritance tax if made by one party to the marriage for the maintenance of the other party .
17 Given that individuals undertake exchange voluntarily , it is presumed that they must thereby be no worse off and that at least one party to the exchange is better off as a result .
18 In one party valuations , the valuer is often advising his client ( ie one party to the transaction ) on the way of obtaining the most favourable price which can be established within sensible limits .
19 Crossed stimulus and response lines create stress but if one party to the transaction can say honestly ‘ that was my parent speaking ’ the stress is relieved .
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