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precedent-setting and case
The Whitinsville Savings Bank was involved in a precedent-setting case in the U. S., involving tort and contract law, known as " Swinton vs. Whitinsville Savings Bank ( 1942 )".
* United States v. Carroll Towing Co., precedent-setting United States appeals court case
Yerodia was involved in a precedent-setting case by the International Court of Justice ( ICJ ).
In 1958 in a precedent-setting case, descendants of the de Tournebu family brought suit against another French noble family, the de Foucaults, to prevent them using the de Tournebu name in their title.
The case of Iraq war resisters clearly became more than a legal issue when Canadian government lawyers entered the situation and presented arguments to the Immigration and Refugee Board adjudicator just prior to this precedent-setting hearing.
As co-counsel in a federal jury trial, Smith won for his clients a million-dollar judgment in a precedent-setting case that a cover story in The New York Times proclaimed to be the largest of its kind in New York history.
In a precedent-setting case the court ruled in their favour, and they won again on appeal.
It was a precedent-setting case in the right to own higher lifeforms, where the Canadian ruling went against findings in the US and Europe, where the patent was upheld.
Publications, Inc., a precedent-setting case that was appealed to the Supreme Court and helped to define the boundaries of parody in American law.
Lucy Duff Gordon is also remembered as a survivor of the sinking of Titanic in 1912, and as the losing party in the precedent-setting 1917 contract law case of Wood v. Lucy, Lady Duff-Gordon, in which Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo wrote the opinion for New York's highest court, the New York Court of Appeals.

precedent-setting and by
Gunther von Hagens ' BODY WORLDS exhibitions are the original, precedent-setting public anatomical exhibitions of real human bodies, and the only anatomical exhibits that use donated bodies, willed by donors to the Institute for Plastination for the express purpose of serving the BODY WORLDS mission to educate the public about health and anatomy.
Priority was able to achieve unrivaled success as an independent label by developing a precedent-setting " street-based " formula of underground marketing which bypassed mainstream radio.
Democratic Senators also objected to the refusal by the Office of the Solicitor General to release samples of Estrada's writings while employed there, although such a release of confidential documents would have been precedent-setting.
The Greens successfully passed precedent-setting policy limiting military recruiters ' access to city high schools, and were recognized by the National School Board Association.

precedent-setting and was
Stephen was furious over what he saw as potentially precedent-setting papal interference in his royal authority, and initially refused to allow Murdac into England.
Judge Horn rendered his precedent-setting verdict, declaring that Howl was not obscene and that a book with “ the slightest redeeming social importance ” guarantees First Amendment protection.
Though short, her political career was precedent-setting as one of the few female political figures in Africa.
Fischel was one of the leading pioneers in the growth of American Judaism, in general, and in American Jewish Orthodoxy, in particular, particularly in the dynamic precedent-setting first half of the 20th Century.
He was sued in the federal civil court of Miami, Florida in the United States in two precedent-setting cases.
Carlo Maderno, then at work extending the nave of St Peter's, was commissioned to enclose the Villa Sforza within a vast Renaissance block along the lines of Palazzo Farnese ; however, the design quickly evolved into a precedent-setting combination of an urban seat of princely power combined with a garden front that had the nature of a suburban villa with a semi-enclosed garden.

precedent-setting and on
In his precedent-setting decision, the Federal district judge stated that on a radio dial " a radio station's frequency is its address " and one cannot copyright an address.
In his precedent-setting decision, the Federal district judge stated that on a radio dial " a radio station's frequency is its address " and one cannot copyright an address.
In the US, a precedent-setting model Solar System project the Voyage National Program began with installation of Voyage on the National Mall in Washington, DC, in front of the Smithsonian museums.
Bennett, under the aegis of producer Joseph Papp, created A Chorus Line based on a precedent-setting workshop process which he pioneered.
In 2008, Smith served as lead trial counsel in a precedent-setting $ 23 million jury trial in New York City on behalf of large private MRI medical practice against over 50 insurance companies.

precedent-setting and pay
Attorney Anne Kajir uncovered evidence of widespread corruption and complicity in the Papua New Guinea government that allowed rampant, illegal logging that is destroying the largest remaining intact block of tropical forest in the Asia Pacific region In 1997, her first year practicing law, Kajir successfully defended a precedent-setting appeal in the Supreme Court of Papua New Guinea that forced the logging interests to pay damages to indigenous land owners.

precedent-setting and 80
The edicts of the Council of Elvira, although early ( and perhaps precedent-setting ) examples of Church-inspired anti-Semitism, provide evidence of Jews who were integrated enough into the greater community to cause alarm among some: of the Council's 80 canonic decisions, all which pertain to Jews served to maintain a separation between the two communities ( Laeuchli, pp. 75 – 76 ).

precedent-setting and for
In 2009, the Cunningham Dance Foundation announced the Legacy Plan, a precedent-setting plan for the continuation of Cunningham ’ s work and the celebration and preservation of his artistic legacy.

precedent-setting and .
Most of its occupants to that time followed Hyde's precedent-setting conception of the presidency as a conservative, low-key institution that used its ceremonial prestige and few discretionary powers sparingly.
His dismay at the Chernobyl disaster led to precedent-setting concerts in parts of communist Asia and Europe.
Occasional spats between the two have caused numerous issues, and in several instances the company's and its licensees ' relations have degenerated into precedent-setting court cases.
He later became one of the nation's foremost trial lawyers, representing thousands of injured persons in precedent-setting cases and mentoring several generations of young attorneys.
This lawsuit is widely recognized as one of the most famous, influential and precedent-setting sports-related cases in the history of American jurisprudence.
One of the results of Jim's trial is that the California Courts allowed, in a precedent-setting decision, a virtual reality reenactment of the murder to be entered into evidence.
With the developments of cloning cells, genetic profiling, mind-altering antibiotics and even virtual rape, the attorneys of Crane, Constable, McNeil & Montero find themselves with an ongoing case-load of precedent-setting cases.
Earthjustice has been a critical player in a number of important, precedent-setting cases regarding environmental protection in the United States.

case and brought
He explained the background of the case, ending with the tenuous clue which had brought him to Gulf Springs.
And, in case, I brought the money with me ''.
In the famous Danbury Hatters case, a suit was brought against the union by the Loewe Company for monopolistic practices, e.g., trying to persuade consumers not to purchase the product of the struck manufacturer.
When the husband drops the case and returns to his wife, both seem sorry they brought the matter up in the first place.
Some appellate courts, particularly supreme courts, have the power of discretionary review, meaning that they can decide whether they will hear an appeal brought in a particular case.
1000 and 1500 are regularly encountered as jury sizes and on at least one occasion, the first time a new kind of case was brought to court ( see graphē paranómōn ), all 6, 000 members of the jury pool were put onto the one case.
Political pressure quickly brought the Reagan administration to reverse itself and to ask the Court to reinstate the case.
Patasse has been found guilty of major crimes in Bangui and CAR has brought a case to the International Criminal Court against him and Jean Pierre Bemba from the neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo accusing them both of multiple crimes in suppressing one of the mutinies against Patasse.
These are usually ' temps ' ( temporary workers ) or consultants who, depending on the project and their experience, might be brought on to lead a task for which the skill-set did not exist within the company, or in the case of a temp, in the vernacular sense, to perform busy-work or an otherwise low-skilled repetitive task for which an employee is deemed too valuable to perform.
The glossing was probably brought to England as Old French crimne ( 12th century form of Modern French crime ), from Latin crimen ( in the genitive case: criminis ).
Jello Biafra brought up the court case after the break-up of the band on The Oprah Winfrey Show.
Solicitors must be careful when looking at older cases when quantifying a claim to ensure that the award is brought up to date and to take into account the court of appeal case in Heil v Rankin Generally speaking the greater the injury the greater the damages awarded.
When Kaye went for his first written pilot's exam, he brought a liverwurst sandwich in case he was there for hours.
Heracles brought the case to court, and Phyleus testified against his father.
The criminal court case brought against Aristide was quietly shelved, though various members of his Lavalas party languished for years in prison without charge or trial due to similar accusations
Aeschines brought this suit against Timarchus to bar him from the rights of political office and his case succeeded.
* 1992 – Aboriginal Land Rights are granted in Australia in Mabo v Queensland ( No 2 ), a case brought by Eddie Mabo.
The offending tribunes in this case were brought before the Senate and divested of their office.
In civil cases a special verdict can be given, but in criminal cases a general verdict is rendered, because requiring a special verdict could apply pressure to the jury, and because of the jury's historic function of tempering rules of law by common sense brought to bear upon the facts of a specific case.
On March 12, 2012, Los Angeles Superior Court took opening statements on the case in which former-JPL employee David Coppedge brought suit against the Lab due to workplace discrimination and wrongful termination.
In 1915, the upstart league brought suit against the existing leagues and owners under the Sherman Act and the case was assigned to Landis.
The case brought comparisons between Landis and King Solomon, who had judged a similar case.
This was demonstrated by the 1987 judgment in the Weaver v NATFHE case in the UK, in which a black Muslim woman brought a complaint of workplace racist harassment against a co-trade unionist.

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