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Similarly and courts
Similarly, the consolidated Teutonic laws of the Germanic tribes, included a complex system of monetary compensations for what courts would consider the complete range of criminal offences against the person, from murder down.
Similarly, section 7482 of the Internal Revenue Code provides that the U. S. Supreme Court and the federal courts of appeals may impose penalties where the taxpayer's appeal of a U. S. Tax Court decision was " maintained primarily for delay " or where " the taxpayer's position in the appeal is frivolous or groundless.
Similarly, the jurisdiction of Federal courts ( other than the Supreme Court ) are statutorily-defined.
Similarly, several courts in the District of Columbia, which is under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Congress, are Article I courts rather than Article III courts.
Similarly, lawsuits alleging some types of police misconduct and prosecutorial misconduct may often be brought in federal court, and federal courts may enjoin state officials from enforcing state laws found to be unconstitutional in a federal lawsuit, under threat of being held personally in contempt of court for doing otherwise.
Similarly, courts have dismissed copyright infringement cases on the grounds that the alleged infringer's use of the copyrighted work ( such as sampling ) was so insignificant as to be " de minimis ".
Similarly, while there were actions against guardians which the child could undertake in the common law courts, these were regularly undertaken in the Court of Chancery.
Lawrence White and Jerry Markham rejected these claims and argued that products linked to the financial crisis were not regulated by Glass-Steagall or were available from commercial banks or their affiliates before the GLBA repealed Glass-Steagall sections 20 and 32. Alan Blinder wrote in 2009 that he had “ yet to hear a good answer ” to the question “ what bad practices would have been prevented if Glass-Steagall was still on the books ?” Blinder argued that “ disgraceful ” mortgage underwriting standards “ did not rely on any new GLB powers ,” that “ free-standing investment banks ” not the “ banking-securities conglomerates ” permitted by the GLBA were the major producers of “ dodgy MBS ,” and that he could not “ see how this crisis would have been any milder if GLB had never passed .” Similarly, Melanie Fein has written that the financial crisis “ was not a result of the GLBA ” and that the “ GLBA did not authorize any securities activities that were the cause of the financial crisis .” Fein noted “ ecuritization was not an activity authorized by the GLBA but instead had been held by the courts in 1990 to be part of the business of banking rather than an activity proscribed by the Glass-Steagall Act .” As described above, in 1978 the OCC approved a national bank securitizing residential mortgages.
Similarly, juries are routinely cautioned by courts and some attorneys to not allow sympathy for a party or other affected persons to compromise the fair and dispassionate evaluation of evidence during the guilt phase of a trial.
Similarly, the importance of law court officials declined as did lawsuits in regular civil courts, and this in turn allowed private settlements mediated by notaries at lower cost to flourish.
Similarly, a 1975 amendment to the Lanham Act gives courts discretion in awarding reasonable attorneys ’ fees to a prevailing party in “ exceptional ” circumstances.
Similarly, a complaint for breach of a promise to marry could be met by a demurrer because the law in most jurisdictions expressly prohibits such claims on public policy grounds ( while there may be claims for damages on a breach of promise to marry, e. g., U. S. courts are not going to force someone to marry another ).
Similarly, most litigants seeking to appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States, Supreme Court of Canada or High Court of Australia require leave before their case can be heard – although there are some exceptions to this in the latter three courts.
) Similarly, equitable remedies such as injunctions, including protective orders, are seldom available from small-claims courts.
Similarly, the dimensions for all baseball parks, basketball courts and ice hockey rinks are given in feet, golf courses in yards, auto racing tracks in miles ( or fractions thereof ), and horse racing in an archaic customary unit, furlongs.
Similarly, courts have held that economic, social, and cultural rights are too indeterminate to satisfy Sosas specificity requirement.
Similarly, whereas when two citizens have a dispute they can appeal to the courts to render a verdict and, more importantly, the law enforcement agencies to enforce the court's ruling, there is no body above nation-states that is capable of: establishing rules or laws for all the states, deciding how these apply in specific cases, and compelling the states to honor the court's ruling.
Similarly, some courts have found no duty to retreat exists when a victim is assaulted in a place where the victim has a right to be, such as within one's own home.
Similarly, it would be possible to question the propriety of polygamous marriages, the talaq system of divorce which is available in some Islamic states, and Jewish divorce known as the get, but it is likely that the courts would be cautious to avoid any implication that they were discriminating against religions.

Similarly and England
Similarly in England William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge produced a collection of Lyrical Ballads in 1798, including Coleridge ’ s ‘ The Rime of the Ancient Mariner ’.
Similarly, a " History of England ", whose fifth edition was published in 1775, writes merely that new translation of the Bible, viz., that now in Use, was begun in 1607, and published in 1611.
Similarly, he accompanied Cardinal Ottobuono Fieschi, the future Pope Adrian V, to England in 1265 – 1268 to suppress a rebellion by a group of barons against King Henry III of England.
Similarly, the micro-porous ( Upper Cretaceous ) Chalk of south east England, although having a reasonably high porosity, has a low grain-to-grain permeability, with much of its good water-yielding characteristics being due to micro-fracturing and fissuring.
Similarly, in 1969, a park ranger, Neville Fenton, recorded a lyrebird song which resembled flute sounds in the New England National Park, near Dorrigo in northern coastal New South Wales.
Similarly, the Historia Norwegiæ makes him flee directly to England, where he was received by his half-brother Haakon, baptised and given charge of Northumbria by Æthelstan.
Similarly, John Campbell in his Lives of the Chief Justices of England, wrote that Hale was " one of the most pure, the most pious, the most independent, and the most learned " of judges.
Similarly, in England there is Thingwall on the Wirral.
Similarly, John Lesley adds that the body taken to England was " my lord Bonhard " and James was seen in Kelso after the battle and then went secretly on pilgrimage in far nations.
Similarly, Reigate's High Street is at an elevation of 83-85 metres ; however, Reigate's undulation is greater throughout, leading to the strategic siting of its castle there, further along the Holmesdale gap between hill ranges in southern England.
Similarly, an English satirical tract of 1599 translated from French, The True History of Pope Joan, says that a Prince had compared the Jesuits advantages in argument to the ace of hearts at Maw, ( adding that Maw was like the German game " Rumstich " as played in England.
Similarly to England, unclaimed money will mostly revert to the Crown who may then make further distribution.
Similarly, since 1990, Test series between Australia and England have been played for a trophy known as The Ashes, a name borrowed from the trophy contested by the same nations in outdoor cricket.
Similarly, the presence of grave goods in the Early Middle Ages in Europe has often been taken as evidence of paganism, although during the period of conversion in Anglo-Saxon England and the Frankish Empire ( 7th century ), the situation may be more complicated.
Similarly, Jourdain Fantosme, who was in the north of England in 1174, wrote an account of the wars between Henry II., his sons, William the Lion of Scotland and Louis VII., in 1173 and 1174 ( Chronicle of the reigns of Stephen ...
Similarly, during this period, England and the United States showed notable Jewish immigration.
Similarly, in the United Kingdom the National Health Service provides medical care for the elderly, as for all, free at the point of use, but social care is only paid for by the state in Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland are yet to introduce any legislation on the matter, so currently social care is only funded by public authorities when a person has exhausted their private resources, for example, by selling their home.
Similarly, a blogger in England named " The Lonely Craftivist " creates textile art with political messages in public spaces.
Similarly, in England, " people living in deprived areas were found to receive around 70 % less provision relative to need compared with the most affluent areas for both knee and hip replacements.
Similarly in England, the Regent House of the University of Cambridge, which is the legislative body, delegates certain functions to special committees of its members, appointed from time to time by Grace ( a proposal offered to the Regent House and confirmed by it ); these committees are termed " syndicates " and are permanent or occasional, and the members are styled " the syndics " of the particular committee or of the institution which they administer ; thus there are the syndics of the Fitzwilliam Museum, of the Cambridge University Press, of local examinations, etc.
Similarly the Anglican priests almost all left for England with the outbreak of war.
Similarly for England the Provincial Synod of Westminster ( 1852 ).
Similarly, the criticism of lawyers comes from a writer who, as Lord Chancellor, was arguably the most influential lawyer in England.

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