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Page "Ratio decidendi" ¶ 11
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Number and dissenting
Number 10 were forced to put out a statement that dissenting backbenchers would be allowed to speak out on the war.

concurring and dissenting
* The concurring opinions of Burger and Douglas, as well as White's dissenting opinion, were issued along with Doe v. Bolton and may be found at:
These lists contain detailed tables about each term, including which Justices filed the Court's opinion, dissenting and concurring opinions in each case, and information about Justices joining opinions.
Justice Thomas, joined by Justice Scalia, issued a strongly worded opinion, concurring in part and dissenting in part, arguing that if Michigan could not remain a prestigious institution and admit students under a race-neutral system, the " Law School should be forced to choose between its classroom aesthetic and its exclusionary admissions system.
On June 30, with six Justices concurring and three dissenting, the Supreme Court upheld the right of the two newspapers to publish the material.
The Court split 6 to 2 in ruling that Baker's case was justiciable, producing, in addition to the opinion of the Court by Justice William J. Brennan, three concurring opinions and two dissenting opinions.
The Court of the King's Bench, led by Lord Mansfield ( with Aston and Willes JJ concurring in judgment, Sir Joseph Yates dissenting ), sided with the publishers, finding that common law rights were not extinguished by the Statute of Anne.
Brewer was an active member of the Supreme Court, writing often in both concurring and dissenting opinions.
His opinions, both concurring and dissenting, were generally very long and weighted with legal history.
He chose not to write a dissenting or concurring opinion, in either hearing.
* The European Court of Human Rights uses the term concurring opinion and calls both concurring and dissenting opinions separate opinions.
" As recently as 2001, in the Supreme Court case of Kyllo v. United States, 533 U. S. 27 ( 2001 ), the article was cited by a majority of justices, both those concurring and those dissenting.
There were 5 concurring and dissenting opinions, signed by eight Committee members.
Justice Thurgood Marshall, dissenting in part and concurring in the result of invalidating the statute, argued that due to the history of discrimination against the mentally retarded, the Court should employ a higher standard of scrutiny ( see Equal Protection scrutiny ) when examining laws that regulated those with mental disabilities.
In contrast to regular opinions, a per curiam does not list the individual judge responsible for authoring the decision, but minority dissenting and concurring decisions are signed.
Sometimes an opinion in the name of the Court may be accompanied by extensive concurring and dissenting opinions.
Justice Brennan wrote an opinion concurring in the method, but dissenting in the outcome.
This finding was made with two of the justices ( William J. Brennan and Thurgood Marshall ) entering an opinion " concurring in part and dissenting in part ," because they accepted the argument of the State of Alabama on the matter in question, but held that capital punishment itself was " cruel and unusual punishment ", prohibited by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States.
Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote a separate opinion concurring in the result, but dissenting in the Court's adoption of the rule of reason.
On March 30, 2006, the Supreme Judicial Court upheld the application of the law as it applies to marriages of same sex couples in a complex decision, Cote-Whitacre v. Department of Public Health, with three concurring decisions filed and one dissenting vote.
Sir Hersch's writings and ( concurring and dissenting ) opinions continue, nearly 50 years after his death, to be cited frequently in briefs, judgments, and advisory opinions of the World Court.
In decisions that require holdings with multiple parts due to multiple legal claims or consolidated cases, judges may write an opinion " concurring in part and dissenting in part ".

concurring and judges
In law, a concurring opinion is a written opinion by one or more judges of a court which agrees with the decision made by the majority of the court, but states different reasons as the basis for his or her decision.
When no absolute majority of the court can agree on the basis for deciding the case, the decision of the court may be contained in a number of concurring opinions, and the concurring opinion joined by the greatest number of judges is referred to as the plurality opinion.
Hyde, three other judges concurring, decided in favor of the Crown but without going so far as to declare the right of the Crown to refuse indefinitely to show cause against the discharge of the prisoners.
" A panel of the same three Circuit judges who heard the first appeal affirmed his decision once again on March 25, with the judge who had previously dissented concurring in this second opinion.

dissenting and judges
In America, it is understood that juries usually weigh the evidence and testimony to determine questions of fact, while judges usually rule on questions of law, although the dissenting justices in the Supreme Court case Sparf et al.
Every judgment contained the reasons behind the decision and the judges assenting ; if there was a dissenting judge, he was allowed to deliver his own judgment, with all judgments read in open court before the agents of the parties to the dispute.
The Army won a reversal of Judge Elliott's habeas corpus grant and a reinstatement of the judgement of the courts martial, with 5 judges dissenting.
The other judges presiding on the case were Nathan Clifford, Noah Swayne, Samuel Miller, David Davis, Joseph Bradley, and Ward Hunt with the majority opinion, and Stephen Field and William Strong with the dissenting opinion.
( People v. Buchalter, 289 N. Y. 181 ) Two of the dissenting judges thought the evidence was so weak that errors in the judge's instructions to the jury as to how to evaluate certain testimony were harmful enough to require a re-trial.
) However, as Justice Byron White noted in his dissenting opinion in Moore v. East Cleveland, " no one was more sensitive than Mr. Justice Harlan to any suggestion that his approach to the Due Process Clause would lead to judges ' roaming at large in the constitutional field.
The judges who voted to allow the government's appeal were Lord Hoffmann, Lord Rodger of Earlsferry, and Lord Carswell ; those dissenting were Lord Bingham of Cornhill and Lord Mance.
One of the two dissenting judges was William Graham Holford, who was skeptical that the design could be built within the $ 18 million budget set by the city.
Out of the permanent judges of the Court of Final Appeal, Bokhary holds the record for the number of dissenting opinions he has written.
All three judges, Somervell, Singleton and Jenkins LJJ, dismissed nuisance on the same grounds as Oliver J. Somervell LJ, dissenting, held that the claimant had failed to establish that the defendants had not taken due and reasonable care, so was not negligent either.
The court's opinion in this case created some controversy among the dissenting judges when it declared that " The scope of a warrantless search based on probable cause is no narrower-and no broader-than the scope of a search authorized by a warrant supported by probable cause.
Two of the twelve judges wrote dissenting opinions, but the actual vote is not public record.
Eight of nine judges ( Justice Claire L ' Heureux-Dubé dissenting ) confirmed that section 2 includes, to at least some degree, the negative right to not associate.
A dissenting opinion ( or dissent ) is an opinion in a legal case written by one or more judges expressing disagreement with the majority opinion of the court which gives rise to its judgment.
In some courts, such as the Supreme Court of the United States, the majority opinion may be broken down into numbered or lettered parts, which allows those judges " dissenting in part " to easily identify which parts they join with the majority, and which sections they do not.

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