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judgment and delivered
The ICJ delivered its judgment on 10 October 2002, finding ( based principally on the Anglo-German agreements ) that sovereignty over Bakassi did indeed rest with Cameroon.
In a 1982 judgment delivered under such a referral, Chief Justice Tom O ' Higgins bemoaned the crude strictures of the prescribed process ; especially the fact that, if the court finds that a bill does not violate the Constitution, this judgment can never subsequently be challenged.
Handed down as a 6-2 decision by the Court on June 4, 1951, the judgment and a plurality opinion was delivered by Chief Justice of the United States Fred M. Vinson, who was joined by Justices Stanley Forman Reed, Sherman Minton, and Harold H. Burton.
" Lamont's view expressed in his memoirs was more nuanced: without the discipline of the ERM, the Major government would have given up on the fight against inflation before Black Wednesday ; ERM membership delivered a sharp break in Britain's inflation performance ; the judgment of the markets that the higher rates needed to maintain Britain's membership was undoubtedly correct ; " the ERM was a tool that broke in my hands when it had accomplished all that it could usefully do.
The poem describes the day of judgment, the last trumpet summoning souls before the throne of God, where the saved will be delivered and the unsaved cast into eternal flames.
scrutin de liste at elections, on which he delivered an adverse judgment.
In one trial, he sat apparently vigorously taking notes during both sides ' lengthy closing arguments and, once they concluded, immediately delivered his judgment.
The English judgment, delivered just over two months after the Labour government took office, remained the most recent precedent in joint enterprise law, though the Bentley verdict attracted far more media attention.
In 1985, he delivered the judgment of the Court of Appeal in the case of Finnigan v New Zealand Rugby Football Union, allowing the appeal of lawyers seeking an injunction against the NZRFU's proposed tour of South Africa.
In 1987, he delivered the judgment of the Court of Appeal in the case of New Zealand Maori Council v Attorney-General, which sought to clarify what Parliament meant by section 9 of the State Owned Enterprises Act 1986.
See that you declare it in the assembly ( contio ) for not less than three market days ; that you may know the opinion of the senate this was their judgment: if there are any who have acted contrary to what was written above, they have decided that a proceeding for a capital offense should be instituted against them ; the senate has justly decreed that you should inscribe this on a brazen tablet, and that you should order it to be placed where it can be easiest read ; see to it that the revelries of Bacchus, if there be any, except in case there be concerned in the matter something sacred, as was written above, be disbanded within ten days after this letter shall be delivered to you.
The second of these two occasions was the case of Robarts v The Corporation of London ( 49 Law Times 455 ; The Times, March 10, 1883 ), and those who may read Jessel's judgment should remember that, reviewing as it does the law and custom on the subject, and the records of the city with regard to the appointment of a remembrancer from the 16th century, together with the facts of the case before the court, it occupied nearly an hour to deliver, but was nevertheless delivered without notes this, too, on 9 March 1883, when the judge who uttered it was within a fortnight of his death.
On February 3, 2009, the court delivered its judgment, which divided the sea area of the Black Sea along a line which was between the claims of each country.
In 1736 the King's Bench, under his presidency, delivered the seminal judgment in Middleton v. Crofts 2 Atk 650, which held that canons made in the provincial clergy convocations could not, by themselves, bind the lay faithful.
The Inquisition used torture to elicit confessions and delivered judgment at public ceremonials known as autos da fe before they gave their victims over to the secular authorities for punishment.
On 8 May 1996, a new text was adopted with the support of 86 per cent of the members of the assembly, but in the First Certification judgment, delivered on 6 September 1996, the Constitutional Court refused to certify this text, identifying a number of provisions that did not comply with the constitutional principles.
The amended text was returned to the Constitutional Court to be certified, which the court duly did in its Second Certification judgment, delivered on 4 December.
Mansfield's prevarications stretched Somersett's Case over six hearings from January to May, and he finally delivered his judgment on 22 June 1772.
Her medical problem probably was a gross tumor of the placenta that had killed the fetus she delivered in late summer, but Puritan leadership — who saw all events in theological terms — deemed this “ monstrous birth ” to have been the judgment of God.
Hedberg occasionally added disclaimers to the end of a joke to let the audience know that he shared their judgment of it, most notably acknowledging when jokes were poorly delivered or received with a resigned " all right.
The case was heard in October 2006 and in the judgment was delivered on 14 December 2006 Ms. Justice Dunne found that although a ' living document ', the Irish constitution had always meant for marriage to be between a man and a woman, that the definitions used in the Civil Registration Act of 2004 was an expression of the current attitudes of the state and that she could find no reason to change that.
Later, in Final Crisis: Revelations # 1, the Spectre delivered final judgment on Doctor Light ( who is discovered in the middle of a mock superhero rape orgy with various women dressed as Teen Titans ), and burned him to death by turning him into a candle, using his head as the wick.
There is different perception about the status of URC employees including the judgment delivered by a three member ’ s bench of Supreme Court recently.

judgment and 1995
A summary judgment followed in 1995, full proceedings in 1999, an appeal in 2001 which has been upheld by the Supreme Court of Netherlands in December 2005, all in favor of the provider and Karin Spaink, putting freedom of speech above copyright in some cases.
It was held in Re Teo Choo Hong ( 1995 ) that the function of a lay member of a lawyers ' disciplinary committee was to observe and not cast a vote or make a judgment.
In a letter dated January 25, 2007, the new Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Cardinal William Levada, following continued requests for clarifications on the writings and activities of Rydén, wrote to the Catholic hierarchy around the world stating that " the Notification of 1995 remains valid as a doctrinal judgment " of the writings, which should be seen as her own personal meditations and that Catholics should not take part in prayer groups established by Rydén.
He has challenged the findings of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia ( ICTY ) and most notably contested the conclusions and reasoning of the Appeal Chamber's 2004 judgment in the Krstić case that the crime of genocide was perpetrated at Srebrenica in July 1995:
His decision to divorce in 2000 to marry Kollmorgen was unfavorably contrasted by some in the press to his own judgment expressed in his 1995 book, The Judgment of God: " Families are destroyed as a father vents his mid-life crisis by abandoning his wife for a ' younger, prettier model.
In India the campaign to legitimise community radio began in the mid-1990s, soon after the Supreme Court of India ruled in its judgment of February 1995 that " airwaves are public property ".
The subsequent case revealed serious defects in the electoral roll, including the registration of many non-resident voters, suggesting that at least 41 % of the names on the roll were inaccurate, and the court judgment in August 1995 invalidated the election.
However, after the Cassation's cancellation of the previous judgment, a new trial took place, and they were convicted, again, to 22 years of prison, in 1995 — apart of the pentito Leonardo Marino, who benefited from the Statute of Limitations for the crimes ( except Sofri, Marino and others were also accused of armed robberies ).
He was subsequently given a suspended six months sentence when judgment was delivered on 15 May 1995.
* November 23, 1995: the final judgment of the Court of Cassation confirms the one of the second appeal trial.
However, IBM made a monumental error of judgment and timing when the IBM Marketing Director over the Grass Roots Marketing Department made the decision to meet his headcount cut targets by eliminating the entire department-one week before the 1995 Fall Comdex.

judgment and Supreme
The Supreme Court of Virginia has stated that '" This Court has repeatedly held that the effect of an appeal to circuit court is to " annul the judgment of the inferior tribunal as completely as if there had been no previous trial.
From such a surrender, the dissolution of the body corporate ensues .” Nor does there seem to have been much question that by “ a judgment of forfeiture against a corporation itself, it may be dissolved .” However, Supreme Court Justice Wilson, lecturing in his unofficial capacity, at least, suggests his displeasure with the doctrine that corporate dissolution cannot be predicated “ by a judgment of ouster against individuals.
The Austrian Supreme Court, in a recent judgment, has confirmed the legal admissibility of these lawsuits under the condition that all claims are essentially based on the same grounds.
In October 1985, the California Supreme Court rejected Rosenthal's appeal of the multimillion-dollar judgment against him for legal malpractice, and upheld conclusions of a trial court and a Court of Appeal that Rosenthal acted improperly.
In April 1986, the U. S. Supreme Court refused to review the lower court's judgment.
The summary judgment ruling was upheld by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, but was unanimously reversed by the US Supreme Court in a decision titled MGM Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd.
In its judgment, the U. S. Supreme Court held that it lacked jurisdiction with respect to Germany's complaint against Arizona due to the eleventh amendment of the U. S. constitution, which prohibits federal courts from hearing lawsuits of foreign states against a U. S. state.
In a brief concurrence in the judgment of Torres v. Puerto Rico, U. S. Supreme Court Justice Brennan, argued that any implicit limits from the Insular Cases on the basic rights granted by the Constitution ( including especially the Bill of Rights ) were anachronistic in the 1970s.
In particular, Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black wrote in a dissent that " t is high time, in my judgment, to wipe out root and branch the judge-invented and judge-maintained notion that judges can try criminal contempt cases without a jury.
The Supreme Court of Virginia said this in Santen v. Tuthill, 265 Va. 492 ( 2003 ), about the practice of an appeal from district court trial de novo to circuit court: " This Court has repeatedly held that the effect of an appeal to circuit court is to ' annul the judgment of the inferior tribunal as completely as if there had been no previous trial.
On 12 January 2009, the Supreme Court of Appeal unanimously overturned Judge Nicholson ’ s judgment but the resignation stood.
Marshall appealed, but the Indiana Supreme Court upheld the decision in a judgment which stated that the Constitution of Indiana could not be replaced in total without a constitutional convention, based on the precedent set by Indiana's first two constitutions.
The Supreme Court unanimously overruled the $ 500, 000 judgment against the Times.
As Hughes desired a clear and strong 5-4 affirmation of the Washington Supreme Court judgment, rather than a 4-4 default affirmation, he convinced the other justices to wait until Stone's return before both deciding and announcing the case.
In extremely rare cases, the Supreme Court may grant the writ of certiorari before the judgment is rendered by the court of appeals, thereby reviewing the lower court's ruling directly.
The passing of the Muslim Women ( Protection of Rights on Divorce ) Act, 1986 by the Rajiv Gandhi government, under pressure from conservative Muslims, to dilute the secular judgment of the Supreme Court, was opposed by Hindutva organisations.
In the context of mandamus from a United States Court of Appeals to a United States District Court, the Supreme Court has ruled that the appellate courts have discretion to issue mandamus to control an abuse of discretion by the lower court in unusual circumstances, where there is a compelling reason not to wait for an appeal from a final judgment.
The case was lost on legal grounds and the decision was upheld on appeal to the Supreme Court of Ireland which referred in its judgment to Christian moral teaching and the needs of society.
In the United States, certiorari is most often seen as the writ that the Supreme Court of the United States issues to a lower court to review the lower court's judgment for legal error ( reversible error ) and review where no appeal is available as a matter of right.
In rejecting bank sales of accounts that functioned like mutual funds, the Supreme Court explained in Investment Company Institute v. Camp that it would have given “ deference ” to the OCC ’ s judgment if the OCC had explained how such sales could avoid the conflicts of interest and other “ subtle hazards ” Glass-Steagall sought to prevent and that could arise when a bank offered a securities product to its customers.
Lead attorney on NAACP v. Alabama, Judge Robert L. Carter, with the dean of Georgetown University Law Center, William TreanorThe United States Supreme Court reversed the first contempt judgment.
The Alabama Supreme Court then claimed the U. S. Supreme Court had relied on a " mistaken premise " and reinstated the contempt judgment, which the U. S. Supreme Court reversed again.

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