Example sentences of "[noun sg] the court [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 343 ) that where a common law court had decided a case the Court of Chancery had no power to intervene between the parties …
2 In the present case the Court of Appeal on 4 November 1991 refused leave to the present petitioner , Strathmore Group Ltd. , to appeal from the judgment of the Court of Appeal dated 4 October 1991 .
3 In the present case the Court of Appeal ( Nourse and Stuart-Smith L.JJ. ) ( 1991 ) 89 L.G.R. 729 , upholding Judge Butter Q.C .
4 In the present case the Court of Appeal were bound by the decisions In re Midland Railway Co. 's Agreement and Ashburn 's case .
5 In the Judith Ward case the Court of Appeal , criticising three senior forensic scientists for being partisan to the police , said that one lesson to be learned from that miscarriage of justice was the clear duty of such people ‘ to act in the cause of justice ’ and that ought to be spelt out to ‘ all engaged or to be engaged in forensic services in the clearest terms ’ .
6 In a recent case the Court of Appeal has held that there certainly may be a lease without rent : Ashburn Anstalt v Arnold ( 1988 ) 2 WLR 706 ( see Chapter 11 ) .
7 A discount of 10-15 per cent is not uncommon and in an extreme case the Court of Appeal refused to disturb a discount of 50 per cent ( Charles Follett Ltd v Cabtell Investments Ltd [ 1987 ] 2 EGLR 88 ) .
8 In that case the Court of Appeal was very much attracted by a reductio argument put forward on behalf of the defendant .
9 Applying those rules to the facts of this case the Court of Appeal decided that the word " Practice " in the partnership agreement clearly meant practice as a general medical practitioner and did not mean anything wider .
10 In Phekoo by contrast the Court of Appeal went directly to the general principle , asking themselves Brett 's question , ‘ What would the position of the accused have been if the facts had been as he believed them to be ? ’
11 By a majority the Court of Appeal held that on the true analysis the firm had in fact been automatically dissolved ( because its continuance would have been illegal ) so soon as there was a failure to renew the practising certificate by one of its members , and that thereafter the properly qualified partners had carried on in a new partnership at will which was not prevented from recovering its costs .
12 There are of course the court of protection costs which are to be calculated and are not a source of disagreement .
13 Of course the Court of Bank of Ireland has very important things to do and important things to think about .
14 In a subsequent decision the Court of Appeal thought many factors needed to be weighed before concluding that individuals could possess no such rights .
15 In the light of that decision the Court of Appeal , in a short judgment , concluded that the taxpayer 's rights from their sub-licensing operations neither arose in nor derived from Hong Kong .
16 ‘ ( 1 ) For the purposes of this Part of this Act the Court of Appeal may , if they think it necessary or expedient in the interests of justice … ( b ) order any witness who would have been a compellable witness in the proceedings from which the appeal lies to attend for examination and be examined before the court , whether or not he was called in those proceedings ; and ( c ) subject to subsection ( 3 ) below , receive the evidence , if tendered , of any witness .
17 On an appeal by the plaintiff the Court of Appeal held ( dismissing the appeal ) that in so far as the rules of the club provided that two of its officers were to be responsible in law for the conduct of the club then ( in the absence of an express provision that the officers were responsible for the condition of the club premises ) the rules did not give rise to a duty of care towards individual members to maintain the club premises in a reasonable state of safety and repair .
18 But for that point the Court of Appeal would have allowed recovery .
19 As an intermediate appellate court the Court of Appeal is bound by its own previous decisions and by decisions of the House of Lords .
20 In normal circumstances , when an unlawful sentence is passed by the Crown Court the Court of Appeal can treat the sentence as a nullity and impose a lawful sentence in place of the unlawful sentence passed by the Crown Court ( see for instance Hollywood ( 1990 ) 12 Cr.App.R .
21 In the event the Court of Appeal came to the conclusion that it was not possible to support the judge 's findings based on the absence of agency but equally were unable , on the judge 's findings , to come to a conclusion on the issue of undue influence .
22 On a bill of Suspension the Court of Session found that the town of Selkirk had contravened the King 's letter and Act of the burghs made thereon — which discharged the burgh to elect any to represent them but actual trafficking and residing burgesses — and fined the burgh .
23 Where the local ombudsman exceeded his jurisdiction when reporting on a complaint against a local authority the Court of Appeal granted a declaration to that effect .
24 Of course another result of the withholding of the statements was that the trial judge and in their turn the Court of Appeal were ignorant of the contents of the statements and of the very existence of the May addendum .
25 We are pleased to state that since the appearance of the first edition of this book the Court of Appeal has at last seen sense in its approach to construction in cases involving general medical practitioners : see Clarke v Newland [ 1991 ] 1 All ER 397 .
26 v. Ministry of Agriculture , Fisheries and Food the Court of Appeal , while regarding itself as bound by the view that Article 86 gave rise to a claim for damages , held that another directly applicable provision , Article 30 ( dealing with quantitative restrictions on imports ) attracted only the remedy of judicial review .
27 However , the Court of Appeal gave the plaintiff his costs of the appeal because it was unlikely that the defendant would have allowed him to take out from the sum paid into court an amount equal to the increased amount the Court of Appeal eventually awarded him .
28 In May last year the Court of Appeal upheld a judgment against the friend for more than £5,500 damages for negligence because he had owed the accountant a duty of care .
29 On appeal the Court of Appeal held that it had no jurisdiction under section 13(2) ( a ) of the Supreme Court Ordinanceto hear the appeal since the proceedings before the High Court judge were criminal and not in any civil cause or matter .
30 On the hearing of the appeal the Court of Appeal imposed an injunction restraining ( 1 ) publication of the identification of J. , his parents , his carers , any establishment at which he was being cared for and the local and health authorities , and of any other matter in a manner calculated to lead to their identification , and ( 2 ) the soliciting of any such information .
  Next page