Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Common law" ¶ 133
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Common and Law
First was the period of codification of existing law: the Code Napoleon in France and the peculiar codification that, in fact, resulted from Austin's restatement and ordering of the Common Law in England.
In certain Common Law jurisdictions, such as India or Pakistan, the power to pass such writs is a Constitutionally guaranteed power.
Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, India, Belize, and various Caribbean and African nations have adopted English common law through reception statutes although they do not inevitably continue to copy English Common Law ; later cases can often draw on decisions in other Common Law jurisdictions.
Guyana and Saint Lucia have mixed Common Law and Civil Law systems.
Nicaragua's legal system also is a mixture of the English Common Law and the Civil Law through the influence of British administration of the Eastern half of the country from the mid-17th century until about 1905, the William Walker period from about 1855 through 1857, USA interventions / occupations during the period from 1909 to 1933, the influence of USA institutions during the Somoza family administrations ( 1933 through 1979 ) and the considerable importation between 1979 and the present of USA culture and institutions.
While he was still on the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, and before being named to the U. S. Supreme Court, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. published a short volume called The Common Law, which remains a classic in the field.
* The History of the Common Law of England by Matthew Hale
* Maxims of Common Law from Bouvier's 1856 Law Dictionary
de: Common Law
Collective traumas have been shown to play a key role in group identity formation ( see: Law of Common Fate ).
The law has provided proper persons with proper powers to visit those institutions, and to correct every irregularity, which may arise within them .” The Common Law provided for inspection by the court of king ’ s bench.
However, there were no widespread reforms of the Common Law.
This would have upset the gentry, who regarded the Common Law as reinforcing their status and property rights.
The Radicals ( approximately forty ) included a hard core of Fifth Monarchists who wanted to be rid of Common Law and any state control of religion.
The Conservatives ( approximately 40 ) wanted to keep the status quo ( since Common Law protected the interests of the gentry, and tithes and advowsons were valuable property ).
A modern version of this appeal to catholic consensus is found in the Canon Law of the Church of England and also in the liturgy published in Common Worship:
The scholar Harvey Wheeler attributed to Bacon, in his work " Francis Bacon's Verulamium-the Common Law Template of The Modern in English Science and Culture ", the creation of these distinguishing features of the modern common law system:
India's independent judicial system began under the British, and its concepts and procedures resemble those of Common Law countries.

Common and by
In 1957 the social-economic approach to European integration was capped by the formation among `` the Six '' of a tariff-free European Common Market, and Euratom for cooperation in the development of atomic energy.
The pressure for our entry to the Common Market is mounting and we will proceed towards this amalgamated trade union by way of a purely `` economic thoroughfare '', or garden path, with the political ramifications kept neatly in the background.
If it is not enough that all of our internationalist One Worlders are advocating that we join this market, I refer you to an article in the New York Times' magazine section ( Nov. 12, 1961 ), by Mr. Eric Johnston, entitled `` We Must Join The Common Market ''.
It was in 1814 that Abraham Wharf and his sister sat by a meager fire in their house on Dogtown Common, a desolate place even then.
The speech of Pausanias distinguishes two manifestations of Aphrodite, represented by the two stories: Aphrodite Ourania (" heavenly " Aphrodite ), and Aphrodite Pandemos (" Common " Aphrodite ).
Common meter hymns were interchangeable with a variety of tunes ; more than twenty musical settings of " Amazing Grace " circulated with varying popularity until 1835 when William Walker assigned Newton's words to a traditional song named " New Britain ", which was itself an amalgamation of two melodies (" Gallaher " and " St. Mary ") first published in the Columbian Harmony by Charles H. Spilman and Benjamin Shaw ( Cincinnati, 1829 ).
Pilots and flight attendants were trained to adopt the " Common Strategy " tactic, which was approved by the FAA.
Common to many of them is the theme of losing or being betrayed by a husband or fiancé.
The Porvoo Common Statement ( 1996 ), agreed to by the Anglican churches of the British Isles and most of the Lutheran churches of Scandinavia and the Baltic, also stated that " the continuity signified in the consecration of a bishop to episcopal ministry cannot be divorced from the continuity of life and witness of the diocese to which he is called.
It continued to attract top talent from colleges and the NFL by the mid-1960s, well before the Common Draft which began in 1967.
Although anthems were written in the Elizabethan period by Tallis ( 1505 – 1585 ), Byrd ( 1539 – 1623 ), and others, they are not mentioned in the Book of Common Prayer until 1662, when the famous rubric " In quires and places where they sing here followeth the Anthem " first appears.
Common suggestions are that they are old English breeds introduced by the early whalers, or by Captain Cook or other early explorers.
Common among the mislabeled works are all of the reasons identified for misattributing Cuyp ’ s works: the lack of biography and chronology of his works made it difficult to discern when paintings were created ( making it difficult to pinpoint an artist ); contentious signatures added to historians ’ confusion as to who actually painted the works ; and the collaborations and influences by different painters makes it hard to justify that a painting is genuinely that of Aelbert Cuyp ; and finally, accurate identification is made extremely difficult by the fact that this same style was copied ( rather accurately ) by his predecessor.
Common categories include the type of structural elements used, by what they carry, whether they are fixed or movable, and by the materials used.
* California Penal Code Section 158: " Common barratry is the practice of exciting groundless judicial proceedings, and is punishable by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months and by fine not exceeding one thousand dollars ($ 1, 000 ).
The Common Buzzard was first described by Linnaeus in his Systema naturae in 1758 as Falco buteo.
They show the closest relationship with the Slavic languages, and have, by most scholars, been reconstructed to a common Proto-Balto-Slavic stage, during which Common Balto-Slavic lexical, phonological, morphological and accentological isoglosses are thought to have developed.
A more recent etymology by Xavier Delamarre would derive it from a Common Celtic * Beltinijā, cognate with the name of the Lithuanian goddess of death Giltinė, the root of both being Proto-Indo-European * gʷelH-" suffering, death ".
Its large size puts it as the third largest in the Bovidae tribe of Strepsicerotini ; behind both the Common and Greater Eland by about, and above the Greater Kudu by about.

Common and Oliver
The name Erasmus had been used by a number of his family and derives from his ancestor Erasmus Earle, Common Sergent of England under Oliver Cromwell.
In his text The Common Law, Oliver Wendell Holmes describes property as having two fundamental aspects.
* Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Common Law ( Dover, 1991, reprint ).
A portrait of Oliver Cromwell hangs in the Senior Common Room and portraits of the 1662 dissenters hang in the library and the corridors of the main college building, together with portraits of Viscount Saye and Sele, John Hampden, Thomas Jollie and Hugh Peters.
Following the Commission's dissolution, Oliver Cromwell made him a Justice of the Common Pleas.
Oliver Cromwell, noting Hale's abilities, asked him to become a Justice of the Common Pleas.
It often breeds in woodland habitats, unlike other wheatears ( Oliver 1990 suggested that it occupies the ecological niche used elsewhere in the Western Palearctic by the Common Redstart ).
Oliver Wendell Holmes, in his 1881 book The Common Law, disputed whether such a thing as an involuntary act exists: " spasm is not an act.
# Oliver Wendell HolmesThe Common Law ; Collected Legal Papers
* The Common Law, a book by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
With Fred Barnes ; Common Sense Radio with Oliver North ; Bob Barr's Laws of the Universe ; Veterans Chronicles with Gene Pell ; The G. Gordon Liddy Show ; The Greg Knapp Experience ; and Dateline Washington with Greg Corombos.
For example, the memorable judicial opinions of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. do not qualify him for this category ; his book, The Common Law, does.
For example, the memorable judicial opinions of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. do not qualify him for this category ; his book, The Common Law, does.
Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Common Law, 108 ( Little, Brown, & Co. 1881 ): “ The standards of the law are standards of general application.

4.332 seconds.