Example sentences of "the court do [adv] [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 Because if the court does n't say that , Yeah , this child must remain in care , erm you know .
2 On issue , the court does not fix a return day but serves on the Crown copy of the particulars of claim , and a notice ( N 390 ) of entry of plaint , and of the effect of paragraphs ( 3 ) and ( 5 ) of Ord 42 , r 6 , namely the rights of the Crown if it considers that the particulars of claim do not contain sufficient information and the action itself is stayed .
3 The court does not appear to have dealt directly with this argument .
4 Not surprisingly , the court does not feel it necessary to disturb the decision with regard to either appellant .
5 If the court does not feel entirely satisfied , it may adjourn the application for the parties to be given further opportunity to negotiate .
6 The court does not offer any criteria of awfulness ; but it may be that the law will reflect those factors involved in the analysis of the circumstances in which treatment is considered to be ethically not indicated .
7 A writ will not normally be renewed so as to deprive the defendant of the accrued benefit of a limitation period , and the court does not deal with the question of whether to renew a writ after expiry of the limitation period on the same basis as an application to disapply the limitation period under s33 of the Limitation Act 1980 ( see para 1.37 above ) ( Waddon v Whitecroft-Scovill Ltd [ 1988 ] 1 WLR 309 ) .
8 Breach of the provisions of the Act involves the commission of an offence punishable by fine and may even in certain circumstances disqualify the firm from bringing proceedings to enforce its contractual rights — where by reason of the breach the defendant is unable to pursue his own claims against the firm or has otherwise suffered financial loss and the court does not consider that justice and equity require that the firm 's action should be allowed to proceed .
9 The probability of the happening of such events need not be measured , for the court does not inquire as to the adequacy of consideration .
10 Approval by the OFT or by the court does not guarantee that individual terms will be considered reasonable if they are challenged under the UCTA 1977 .
11 If the court does not wish to intervene it can achieve this result by saying that there was no error at all , by characterising the error as one within jurisdiction , or by defining jurisdiction itself more narrowly than in Anisminic .
12 The label rational basis would simply be reflective of a conclusion already reached that the court does not wish to intervene .
13 Put another way , the court does not know what to enforce .
14 In Northern Regional Health Authority v Crouch [ 1984 ] 1 QB 644 , the Court of Appeal held that the court does not have the powers of an arbitrator under standard form construction contracts to " open up , review , and revise any certificate , opinion , decision , requisition or notice … and to determine all matters in dispute …
15 The court does not have the power to appoint experts in private references : its power to appoint arbitrators arises under ss7 and 10 of the Arbitration Act 1950 : there is no similar statutory provision for experts , and no inherent power .
16 The principle probably does not apply in cases where the court does not have those powers .
17 Although agreement may be reached between the parties as to the future of the matrimonial home , it is strongly advised that such agreement be embodied in a " consent order " of the court ; if the court does not have the power directly to make an order under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 ( for instance in relation to repairs to property held subject to certain conditions and in relation to payment of premiums of life assurance policies ) the same effect can be achieved by formulating the obligations of each party as undertakings given to the court ( see Livesey v Jenkins [ 1985 ] 1 All ER 106 and Salter , Matrimonial Consent Orders and Agreements , 2nd edn , Longman 1991 ) .
18 One copy of the petition is returned to the debtor endorsed with the hearing date ( if the court does not hear the petition forthwith ) , but if a voluntary arrangement is in force , at least 14 days ' notice of the hearing must be given to the supervisor .
19 The difficulty about regarding this as the whole story , however , is that the court does not seem to have been in doubt that the purpose of the additional charges was to prevent the release of the applicants , but it did not regard this as conclusive .
20 The court does not substitute its commercial judgment for that of the board , ’ he added .
21 His reign is often described as a period of revival of interest in Classical themes and modes of expression , but the profound change in the social composition of the court did not outlast the emperor .
22 Indeed , the Ravenna Annals seem to suggest that the court did not recognize the barbarians as a significant problem ; they concentrate on recording and depicting the failures and executions of usurpers .
23 In this case there was no such evidence with the result that the court did not decline to hear the case .
24 However , the case is significant in showing that the court did not regard as an abuse of the court 's process , a second prosecution whose principal objective was to obtain redress or a second victim .
25 However , the court did not rule that the suspension had been wrong in principle , and on Jan 9 members voted to both re-invoke it and to begin a new investigation into Miss Halford 's behaviour .
26 Although implied assent to the acceptance of third party rights can be presumed where the parties have intended to accord such rights , the Court did not extend this to implied adherence to a multilateral convention for the purpose of claiming benefits alone , where ratification and accession are possible .
27 In an attempt to avoid the confusion and last-minute delays which had surrounded the execution of Robert Alton Harris in April [ see p. 38857 ] , however , the Court did not announce its decision until 10.59 p.m. , one minute before the scheduled time of Coleman 's death .
28 William Pitt , First Earl of Chatham , should have had pall-bearers equal in rank to himself , but this was not to be and in a letter written in 1778 following the funeral in Westminster Abbey , the nineteen-year-old Pitt the Younger said to his mother , ‘ The Court did not honour us with their countenance , nor did they suffer the procession to be as magnificent as it ought ; but it had , notwithstanding everything essential to the great object , the attendance being most remarkable .
29 In the Petitioners case the Court did not limit the General Assembly to the role actually performed by the League Council , and implicitly retreated from its earlier reasoning based on status .
30 They started from the position , in my judgment incorrectly , that the references in Thomas v. University of Bradford to the visitor 's jurisdiction being exclusive meant simply that the court did not have concurrent jurisdiction with him .
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