Example sentences of "the 1984 act " in BNC.

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1 The appellant appealed on the ground that the co-defendant 's plea of guilty should have been excluded by the trial judge in the exercise of his discretion under section 78(1) of the 1984 Act .
2 There was a benign vagueness to the law on detention before the 1984 Act .
3 One important omission from the 1984 Act is the right to silence .
4 The whole momentum of the 1984 Act , with its emphasis on detention , interrogation , and confessions , has made the right to silence more vulnerable than ever to allegations that it is out of date , too favourable to criminals , and anachronistic .
5 ‘ Commerce , not liberty , is the motive ’ , said The Times , going on to call the Bill , which became the 1984 Act , meagre and minimalist .
6 Although a trial judge might exclude evidence on the ground of fairness under s 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 , the fact that Parliament had incorporated the provisions of s 2(8) into the 1987 Act suggested that it had not felt that the power under the 1984 Act was sufficient to protect a person from being compelled to give evidence .
7 A point of difference between the 1984 and the 1957 Acts is that liability for loss or damage to the property of the non-visitor is not covered by the 1984 Act , whereas loss or damage to the property of a visitor is covered by the 1957 Act .
8 I(l) ( a ) of the 1984 Act .
9 Commenting on the provisions of the 1984 Act , Walsh envisages that :
10 The 1984 Act sought to make the system more independent of the police by giving the Police Complaints Authority more involvement in the running of ‘ major ’ investigations involving death , serious injury , assault , conspiracy and matters of public concern ( including the policing of public disorder ) .
11 Under the 1984 Act , the PCA is empowered to : ( i ) choose , or veto the choice , of investigating officers , supervise their inquiries , and receive their final report ; ( ii ) monitor the speed and efficiency of the investigation and issue a statement to the Chief Constable saying whether it was satisfactorily carried out ; ( iii ) receive a Chief Constable 's decision on what action he intends to take as a result of an investigation and , if need be , overturn the decision ( either by preferring disciplinary charges or , if it believes an offence has been committed , referring the case to the Director of Public Prosecutions ) .
12 Furthermore , the original intention of the 1984 Act was that the burden of proof should rest on potential proprietors to demonstrate suitability , and Harman and Harman claim that the reverse of this is happening with local authorities having to prove unsuitability .
13 As we discuss elsewhere , the 1984 Act introduced a new statutory right to legal advice , as part of a detailed legal regime governing the detention and interrogation of suspects .
14 In the case the issue arose in relation to an order made against a firm of solicitors under section 27 of the Drug Trafficking Offences Act 1986 , which incorporates section 10 of the 1984 Act .
15 The research will seek the answer to that question by a detailed study of the exercise of the various police powers of search and seizure contained in the 1984 Act .
16 Financial orders on divorce negotiation and adjudication following the 1984 Act
17 If the plaintiff was a trespasser , then the 1984 Act is appropriate .
18 Neither are they covered by the 1984 Act , as s. 1(7) of that Act specifically excludes them .
19 When Parliament was considering the 1984 Act they were only concerned with trespassers .
20 If this principle applies to the 1984 Act then it would mean that the defence of volenti will vary according to the category of entry .
21 The 1984 Act is silent on the question of exclusion , which means that any duty owed may or may not be excludable .
22 The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 does not apply to the 1984 Act as it only has application to common law duties and the statutory duty under the 1957 Act .
23 The 1957 Act has specific provisions on its excludability whereas the 1984 Act is silent .
24 If the plaintiff is a trespasser , the 1984 Act .
25 Dick is a trespasser and any duty owed would be under the 1984 Act .
26 The principles contained within the 1984 Act are designed to comply with the principles as stated in the Council of Europe Convention on Data Protection .
27 This is because if such proceedings are commenced in the High Court they are liable to be struck out under s 40(1) ( b ) of the 1984 Act ( see below ) .
28 ( 2 ) Cases within the county court 's equity and probate jurisdiction ( ie those mentioned in s 23 , 24 or 32 of the 1984 Act ) fall outside the remainder of these rules , as do proceedings which , in accordance with the rules laid down in arts 9 and 10 , have no quantifiable value ( art 7(2) ) .
29 ( 5 ) Wherever , in ( 3 ) and ( 4 ) above , the order requires one or other court to consider whether it ought to try the case or whether it ought to transfer it ( pursuant to the powers of transfer under ss 40(2) , 41(1) or 42(2) of the 1984 Act ) that court must have regard to the criteria laid down in art 7(5) and set out at the start of Chapter 13 .
30 On its commencement every proceeding is identified by a title , made up of the name of the court in which it is brought , the names of the parties and any Act ( other than the 1984 Act ) relied on to give the court jurisdiction , and by a distinguishing number allotted to it by the court office , written ( in an action ) as " Case No " or ( in a matter ) as " No of Matter " .
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