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cases and Maher
In other areas of law, the court developed doctrines of equity in relation to commercial law and contract law, in cases such as Waltons Stores v Maher ( 1988 ) and Trident General Insurance v McNiece ( 1988 ), and made significant developments in tort law, in cases such as Rogers v Whitaker ( 1992 ) and Burnie Port Authority v General Jones ( 1994 ).

cases and practice
The few cases of clear favoritism along social-class lines are as likely as not to involve representatives of the working class on the school board who favor some such practice as higher wages for janitors rather than pay increases for teachers, and such issues are not issues of educational policy.
It is good practice to treat the two cases separately.
In practice, as before the Reformation, many received communion rarely, as little as once a year in some cases ; George Herbert estimated it as no more than six times.
In practice, the above definition is rarely used because in virtually all cases, the curl operator can be applied using some set of curvilinear coordinates, for which simpler representations have been derived.
The practice of withholding the cup from the laity was confirmed ( twenty-first session ) as one which the Church Fathers had commanded for good and sufficient reasons ; yet in certain cases the Pope was made the supreme arbiter as to whether the rule should be strictly maintained.
An option for treating partners of patients ( index cases ) diagnosed with chlamydia or gonorrhea is patient-delivered partner therapy ( PDT or PDPT ), which is the clinical practice of treating the sex partners of index cases by providing prescriptions or medications to the patient to take to his / her partner without the health care provider first examining the partner.
Few lawyers practice trial law or complex litigation and typically refer such cases to those who have the time, resources and experience to handle a complex trial and the commitment involved to complete a trial successfully.
The introduction of foreign bacteria into the human GI tract via infusion of fecal enemas is, moreover, an established medical practice in cases of ulcerative colitis, especially where the patient's own intestinal flora has been significantly depleted by antibiotic therapy applied for other maladies.
In current US legal practice, in rem suits are primarily asset forfeiture cases, based on drug laws, as in USA v. $ 124, 700 ( 2006 ).
The difference in speed can be substantial, especially for long data sets where N may be in the thousands or millions — in practice, the computation time can be reduced by several orders of magnitude in such cases, and the improvement is roughly proportional to N / log ( N ).
Glossolalia or speaking in tongues is the fluid vocalizing ( or less commonly, the writing ) of speech-like syllables which lack any readily comprehended meaning, in some cases as part of religious practice.
Some of the characteristics of a presidential system ( i. e., a strong dominant political figure with an executive answerable to them, not the legislature ) can also be found among absolute monarchies, parliamentary monarchies and single party ( e. g. Communist ) regimes, but in most cases of dictatorship, their stated constitutional models are applied in name only and not in political theory or practice.
Polk's practice was successful as there were many cases arising from debts after the Panic of 1819.
Jumping the broom also fell out of practice due to the stigma it carried, and in some cases still carries, among black Americans wishing to forget the horrors of slavery.
In practice, this means that jury trials are available in American civil cases in most cases seeking money damages on a tort law or contract law theory, but are rarely available when non-monetary damages, such as an injunction or declaratory relief are sought.
There is not a United States constitutional right under the Seventh Amendment to a jury trial in state courts, but in practice, almost every state except Louisiana, which has a civil law legal tradition, permits jury trials in civil cases in state courts on substantially the same basis that they are allowed under the Seventh Amendment in federal court.
The assignment of individual cases to students to contemplate on ( and eventually attain an initial insight ) developed from the practice of commenting on cases.
* Many cases that arise in practice, and " random instances " from some distributions, can nonetheless be solved exactly.
In 1949, the former lawyer of many Supreme Court cases, St-Laurent ended the practice of appealing Canadian legal cases to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council of Great Britain, making the Supreme Court of Canada the highest avenue of legal appeal available to Canadians.
Unlike Internet market the state of the mobile market in the country is very poor, while coverage is not really an issue all carriers practice archaic methods that carriers in many developed countries have long since abolished, general prices are very high compared to other CIS and even EU countries with no change in this segment in many years in fact in some cases the prices have even increased, mobile Internet access is in no better condition with very high prices and very low monthly caps compared to extremely well developed and cheap wired Internet access.
Most measures met in practice in analysis ( and in many cases also in probability theory ) are Radon measures.

cases and extraordinary
Under the new rules, testimony is taken orally in open court in all cases except those of an extraordinary character.
" On the other hand, Bastiat himself declared that subsidy should be available, but limited: " under extraordinary circumstances, for urgent cases, the State should set aside some resources to assist certain unfortunate people, to help them adjust to changing conditions.
Praetors established a workable body of laws by judging whether or not singular cases were capable of being prosecuted either by the edicta, the annual pronunciation of prosecutable offense, or in extraordinary situations, additions made to the edicta.
Three cases were disposed of during the Court's first session, one during an extraordinary sitting between 8 January and 7 February 1923 ( the Tunis-Morocco Nationality Question ), four during the second ordinary sitting between 15 June 1923 and 15 September 1923 ( Eastern Carelia Question, S. S. Wimbledon Case, German Settlers Question, Acquisition of Polish Nationality Question ) and one during a second extraordinary session from 12 November to 6 December 1923 ( Jaworznia Question ).
1926 saw reduced business, with only one ordinary session and one extraordinary session ; it was, however, the first year that all 11 judges had been present to hear cases.
The Court was mandated to open on 15 June each year, and continue until all cases were finished, with extraordinary sessions if required ; by 1927, there were more extraordinary sessions than ordinary ones.
In some cases, the only difference between the two is that the hero uses his extraordinary powers to help others, while the villain uses his powers for selfish, destructive or ruthless purposes.
In some extraordinary cases, undersea or land-based cables have been tapped, as well.
Here one of his services was to create, in connection with the faculty of law, a " Spruch-Collegium ", an extraordinary tribunal competent to deliver opinions on cases remitted to it by the ordinary courts ; and he took an active part in its labours.
: On April 12, 2003, The Associated Press reported: “ The famed Iraq National Museum, home of extraordinary Babylonian, Sumerian and Assyrian collections and rare Islamic texts, sat empty Saturday-except for shattered glass display cases and cracked pottery bowls that littered the floor .”
Nonetheless, many of them have extraordinary talents, and some, known as prodigious savants, are relatively normal and functional with only mild or even no impairment in some cases.
The 1979 amended regulations, however, limited the length of reeducation through labor to three years with possible extension for extraordinary cases.
The 1979 amended Regulations, however, limited the length of reeducation through labor to three years with the possibility of extensions in extraordinary cases.
Article 16 of the Constitution gives the head of government " extraordinary powers " in exceptional cases, leading to an effective " state of exception ":
Even the dogs, weapons of extraordinary importance, in some cases were rewarded.
His knowledge of law and equity was wide and accurate, and his memory for cases and command of the principles laid down in them extraordinary.
One of the most extraordinary cases in British criminal history took place in Salcombe.
* The President can appoint and recall ambassadors extraordinary and plenipotentiary, and can receive foreign ambassadors extraordinary and plenipotentiary, to negotiate and sign international agreements on behalf of the Socialist Republic with the Heads of other States ; he can approve or join international agreements, except in cases where a decision by the National Assembly is necessary.
On 3 May, Griffenfeld was tried not by the usual tribunal, in such cases the Højesteret, or supreme court, but by an extraordinary tribunal of 10 dignitaries, none of whom was particularly well disposed towards the accused.
In the end, the Condon Committee suggested that there was nothing extraordinary about UFOs, and while it left a minority of cases unexplained, the report also argued that further research would not be likely to yield significant results.
It also carries opposite meanings, however: in some cases of pacifism, and in the United States, of extraordinary bravery and excellence in combat marksmanship.
The IAU's Committee on Small Body Nomenclature formally accepted the name in September 2004, and also considered that, in similar cases of extraordinary interest, it might in the future allow names to be announced before they were officially numbered.

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