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Page "news" ¶ 146
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case and judges
The case of " beauty " is different from mere " agreeableness " because, " If he proclaims something to be beautiful, then he requires the same liking from others ; he then judges not just for himself but for everyone, and speaks of beauty as if it were a property of things.
As opposed to that, the inquisitorial system has a judge ( or a group of judges who work together ) whose task is to investigate the case.
Common law ( also known as case law or precedent ) is law developed by judges through decisions of courts and similar tribunals ( as opposed to statutes adopted through the legislative process or regulations issued by the executive branch ).
A capital case could not be tried by a normal Beit Din of three judges, it can only be adjudicated by a Sanhedrin of a minimum of 23 judges.
In major international events, there are seven judges in which case the highest and lowest scores are again discarded and the middle five are summed, then ratioed by, and multiplied by the DD, so as to provide consistent comparison with 5-judge events.
Fox complained to judges about decisions he considered morally wrong, as in his letter on the case of a woman due to be executed for theft.
Home was on the panel of judges in the Joseph Knight case which ruled that there could be no slavery in Scotland.
The judges have no say in the jury deliberations, but jury-instructions are given by the chief-judge ( lagmann ) in each case to the jury before deliberations.
Then the case is settled by three judges and four lay-judges.
In America, it is understood that juries usually weigh the evidence and testimony to determine questions of fact, while judges usually rule on questions of law, although the dissenting justices in the Supreme Court case Sparf et al.
On 18 January 2000, the judges decreed for a dismissal of proceedings due to the statute of limitation regarding the case filed for the jewelry store robbery and for " opposition to the Firearms Act " ( law no.
" In this case the judges found that " the ligeance or faith of the subject is due unto the King by the law of nature: secondly, that the law of nature is part of the law of England: thirdly, that the law of nature was before any judicial or municipal law: fourthly, that the law of nature is immutable.
One of the shrewdest moves by which the English judges pushed their plan of making a common law was by limiting the verdict of the jury in every case to questions of fact.
In practice, however, judges in one system will almost always choose to follow relevant case law in the other system to prevent divergent results and to minimize forum shopping.
In Scotland and many countries throughout the world, particularly in mainland Europe, civil law means that judges take case law into account in a similar way, but are not obliged to do so and are required to consider the precedent in terms of principle.
: hat is the way of the common law, the judges preferring to go ' from case to case, like the ancient Mediterranean mariners, hugging the coast from point to point, and avoiding the dangers of the open sea of system or science
The adversarial nature of the system puts judges in a passive role, in which they have no independent access to information with which to assess the strength of the case against the defendant.
The original Statutes of the Court provided that all 11 judges were required to sit in every case.
After receiving files in a case calculated to lead to a judgment, the judges would exchange their views informally on the salient legal points of the case, and a time limit for producing a judgment would then be set.
Turkish courts have no jury system ; judges render decisions after establishing the facts in each case based on evidence presented by lawyers and prosecutors.
A judge can be audited for misconduct only with the Ministry of Justice's permission, in which case a special task force of justice experts and senior judges is formed.

case and 58th
Ancient sources record dates in the mid-sixth centuryEusebius dates Theognis in the 58th Olympiad ( 548 – 45 BC ), Suda the 59th Olympiad ( 544 – 41 BC ) and Chronicon Paschale the 57th Olympiad ( 552 – 49 BC ) yet it is not clear for example whether Suda in this case means a date of birth or some other significant event in the poet's life and, moreover, all three sources could have derived their dates from lines 773 – 82 under the assumption that these refer to Harpagus's attack on Ionia in the reign of Cyrus The Great.

case and precinct
However, in one case in Conway County, four masked, armed white men stormed into a predominantly black voting precinct and, at gunpoint, stole the ballot box that contained a large majority of votes for Clayton.
In Texas, constables and their deputies are fully empowered police officers with county-wide jurisdiction and thus, may legally exercise their authority in any precinct within their county and adjacent counties ; however, some constables ' offices limit themselves to providing law enforcement services only to their respective precinct, except in the case of serving civil and criminal process.
In this case " precinct " is the place of voting.
The case may uncover a dirty-cop conspiracy ( ultimately leading back to the 27th Precinct, the very precinct that banished him ), and his commanding officer repeatedly orders him to leave the case to the " real detectives " in the NYPD.
At the end of the episode, Parker tacitly acknowledges to Briscoe that he used his contacts in his old precinct to engineer the shooting death of a key prosecution witness in his son's case ( resulting in a mistrial ).
Logan discovers that Lauren had a whole other life, her name used to be Kathleen Shaw and she was running from an abusive ex-boyfriend, who becomes a person of interest in her death, Logan having to argue with overzealous detectives in the local precinct running the case.
* For counties with populations less than 18, 000 ( as determined by the census ), the entire county shall be one JP precinct, unless the Commissioners ' Court determines that more are needed, in which case the court can divide the county into no more than four JP precincts.

case and 23d
After reading his statement discharging the 23d ward case, Karns told Wexler that if the seven cases scheduled for trial also involved persons who had been subpenaed, he would dismiss them.

case and ward
It seems to be indispensable to the national self-esteem that the Negro be considered either as a kind of ward ( in which case we are told how many Negroes, comparatively, bought Cadillacs last year and how few, comparatively, were lynched ), or as a victim ( in which case we are promised that he will never vote in our assemblies or go to school with our kids ).
In the case of larger parishes, they may be divided into parish wards, with separate elections for each ward.
" Apart from regular donations to organisations and individuals, especially in the case of AIDS and cancer patients, he is behind the creation of a children's ward at the Nanavati hospital in Mumbai, in memory of his late mother.
All government levels refer to the riding, or the ward in the case of the municipal government, as Beaches-East York.
With Ron's involuntary help ( Dexter ties him up in his dressing room and steals his car ), Dexter presents his case to Kate in a busy hospital ward.
In the case of children who have been declared a ward of court i. e. cases where the court is acting in loco parentis the Tipstaff has a role in ensuring that those children are delivered to the locations specified by the court.
In this case a metal handsaw is preferable to a chainsaw because its finer cut helps to ward moisture and pest penetration.
In addition to this, fire safety plans can also provide specialized information that, in the case of a hospital fire, can provide information about the location of things like the nuclear medicine ward.
After a priest turns up in her ward horribly charred during a thunder storm, Jude is given details on John Strange, a mysterious, distant man who may be able to solve the case.
A dispensary is functioning in the hostel campus with an attached in-patient ward to accommodate students and staff in case of illness.
" To enquire regularly and periodically into the proper condition of watercourses, roads, paths, and ditches ; to guard against all manner of encroachments upon the public rights, whether by unlawful enclosure or otherwise ; to preserve landmarks, to keep watch and ward in the town, and overlook the common lands, adjust the rights over them, and restraining in any case their excessive exercise, as in the pasturage of cattle ; to guard against the adulteration of food, to inspect weights and measures, to look in general to the morals of the people, and to find a remedy for each social ill and inconvenience.
However, this was not the case and he has been selected to fight a Council ward in the East end of Glasgow in next year's council elections.
The case of Jennifer Anguko, a popular elected official who bled slowly to death in the maternity ward in a major hospital, aptly exemplifies the poor state of maternal health care that is provided to women, even in major urban healthcare facilities.
The old system whereby ward politicians selected school employees was dropped in the case of teachers and replaced by a merit system requiring a college-level education in a normal school ( teacher's college ).
An example of such a case is that of Hōdhado ward.
With the introduction of local government policy in Maldives, the Decentralisation Act 2010 passed by the People's majlis specifically states that in case of Fuvahmulah an island council has to be elected for each ward of the island.
A court may take responsibility for the legal protection of an individual, usually either a child or incapacitated person, in which case the ward is known as a ward of the court, or a ward of the state.
In case any emergency tracheostomy was required there was a connecting alarm bell to the Casualty Block which would alert the medical officer on duty to rush to the ward.

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