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bailiff and each
Instead of the Acht Orte appointing a bailiff together, Zurich and Bern each appointed the governor for 7 out of 16 years while Glarus appointed him for the remaining 2 years.
Several country districts ( e. g., Baar, Menzingen, and Aegeri ) each had its own " Landsgemeinde " but were governed by one bailiff, also appointed by the Habsburgs ; these were known as the " Aeusser Amt ," and were always favorably disposed to the Swiss Confederation.
In the Channel Islands the bailiff is the first civil officer in each of the two bailiwicks.
Rusty Burrell was his bailiff, Jack Harrell was the announcer, and Doug Llewelyn was the host and court reporter, who would announce the matter of the dispute at the beginning of each trial.

bailiff and must
Assistant bailiffs are similarly licensed, but must be supervised by a bailiff.

bailiff and order
Around 1370 bailiff Willem van Naaldwijk ordered the construction of defensive walls and a moat to fortify the city, in order to shield Holland from renewed hostilities with Utrecht.
Otto von Plotho assigned to his bailiff, François de Cabootere, the mission to organize his Flemish regions and to create legislative order.
No action can be brought against a bailiff acting under order of the court without six days ' notice (§ 52 ).
* bailiff, the marshal of the court, charged now chiefly with keeping order in the courtroom.
In that same order, the President of the Court may authorize the bailiff to carry out any enquiry required to ascertain the origin, nature and scope of the infringement.
In accordance with an order from the bailiff, someone during the night broke down the monument, and Trascz's coffin was transferred from the churchyard to the public cemetery.
The making of khokhloma was first mentioned in 1659 in the letter of a boyar called Morozov to his bailiff, containing an order for the following: " One hundred painted dishes polished with powdered tin, both large and medium, of the very same kind possessed by us earlier, not forgetting twenty large painted wine bowls, twenty medium, and twenty somewhat smaller ".
The bailiff stands ( or sits ) against one wall and keeps order in the courtroom.
In rare circumstances in civil trials a bailiff or someone else charged to keep order may be present ( for example if a tenant who is due to be evicted for violent behaviour arrives in court drunk ).
In 1303, the Reeve ( the Lord's official on the manor ) of Kempsey beheaded John de Draycote, a clerk, on the highway between Kempsey and Draycote, by order of the bishops bailiff.
The " bailiff " reveals himself as Damis in disguise, and he is quickly followed by Valère in disguise as a police officer, and Mariane as a special envoy of the King, who has been sent in order to arrest Tartuffe!
By order of the government, Móric Scharf was under the control of the district bailiff, who placed him in the custody of the warden Henter, and thus removed from contact with the other defendants and other Jews.
For example, when a bailiff or marshal calls the court to order part of the cry will take the form " in and for the County of San Francisco "; When there is a change of venue the cry will be, " in the County of Alameda for the County of San Francisco.

bailiff and judicial
In Belgium, the bailiff can be appointed by a confiscating court to exercise the judicial mandate of schuldbemiddelaar ( in Dutch ) or médiateur de dettes ( in French ), a debt negotiator, in a procedure called collectieve schuldenregeling ( CSR ) or médiation collective de dettes, a collectively negotiated settlement of debts, which is comparable with the regulations by the Wet Schuldsanering Natuurlijke Personen ( WSNP ) in the Netherlands.

bailiff and role
While filming in the Broward County Courthouse used as the set for the Miami Courthouse, director Fosse decided to cast a real-life bailiff in the role of the bailiff who drags Dustin Hoffman ( Lenny ) out of the courtroom.
" This role was qualified in Chapter 24 of Magna Carta in 1215, which states: " No sheriff, constable, coroner or bailiff shall hold pleas of our Crown.
In this later role, the bailiff has essentially replaced the pre-Conquest office of scyldhǣta ( scultheta ).
The office originated in medieval England to serve the Sovereign in a police role, much like a bailiff in more recent times.
* Like the female bailiff role, the public defender role went through two cast changes as well.
On television, Taylor appeared often, including the role of a talkative hotel clerk and court bailiff in The Outlander, the fifth episode of ABC's Cheyenne Western series, starring Clint Walker.
Best known for her role as the raspy-voiced bailiff Florence Kleiner on the sitcom Night Court, Halop was the sister of Billy Halop, one of the original Dead End / East Side Kids.

bailiff and be
After Quiney was elected bailiff in September, 1601, without Greville's approval, Greene wrote him that Coke had promised to be of counsel for Stratford and had advised `` that the office of bayly may be exercised as it is taken upon you, ( Sr. Edwardes his consent not beinge hadd to the swearinge of you ) ''.
The proclamation could be made in an incorporated town or city by the mayor, bailiff or " other head officer ", or a justice of the peace.
In medieval England, Michaelmas marked the ending and beginning of the husbandman's year, George C. Homans observes: " at that time harvest was over, and the bailiff or reeve of the manor would be making out the accounts for the year.
While a trusted bailiff might be manumitted as a gesture of gratitude, for those working as agricultural labourers or in workshops, there was little likelihood of being so noticed.
By the County Courts Act 1888, it is provided that there shall be one or more High Bailiffs, appointed by the judge and removable by the Lord Chancellor ; and every person discharging the duties of high bailiff is empowered to appoint a sufficient number of able and fit persons as bailiffs to assist him, whom he can dismiss at his pleasure.
Any warrant to a bailiff to give possession of a tenement justifies him in entering upon the premises named in the warrant, and giving possession, provided the entry be made between the hours of 6 a. m. and 10 p. m. (§ 142 ).
Henslowe is recorded working as assistant to Henry Woodward, reputed to be the bailiff of Viscount Montague, owner of Cowdray House and Battle Abbey in Sussex.
But Raymond soon arrived and, as the closest male relative of King Amalric, demanded to be named bailli ( also " bailiff " or " regent ").
Following increasing conflicts between the Appenzellers the abbot's agents, including the bailiff of Appenzell demanding that a dead body be dug up because he wanted the man's clothes, the Appenzellers planned an uprising.
Following increasing conflicts between the Appenzellers the abbot's agents, including the bailiff of Appenzell demanding that a dead body be dug up because he wanted the man's clothes, the Appenzellers planned an uprising.
From this time on the bailiff was to be the chief power in Jersey as president of the States, rather than as president of the Royal Court.
Following increasing conflicts between the Appenzellers the abbot's agents, including the bailiff of Appenzell demanding that a dead body be dug up because he wanted the man's clothes, the Appenzellers planned an uprising.
Most jurisdictions require or permit process to be served by a court official, such as a sheriff, marshal, constable or bailiff.
According to the some opinions, the denominator of the landscape may have been the first bailiff of Bač ( Bács ) castle, and the name one which can be rendered probable it Old Turkic baya derives from a dignity name.
And that no one of them be compelled to provide his lord, or any bailiff of his, beyond twelve pence, unless he wishes to do it of his own good will, and that no inquisition of affairs of non-burgesses be made by the aforesaid burgesses, but by the freeholders of the country, nor of the burgesses by non-burgesses.
The separate court of quarter sessions, limited to three justices, continued to exist, and a high bailiff and coroner continued to be appointed.
in the year 1269 Giffard instructed that his bailiff at Churchdown ( near Gloucester ), "... to pay to Roger the miller of Oxford twenty shillings, for our kinsman William of Greenfield while he is studying there, because it would be difficult for us to send the money to him on account of the perils of the ways ".
The actual seizure of the goods may be carried out by the landlord, the landlord's agent, or an officer of the government, a bailiff or sheriff officer in the United Kingdom or a sheriff or marshal in the United States.
Should the defendant fail to pay, the bailiff will visit the premises of the defendant, usually within fifteen working days, and attempt to identify items which can be sold at auction to recoup the outstanding debt, subject to the restrictions below.

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