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Page "Foreign relations of Libya under Muammar Gaddafi" ¶ 101
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court's and judgement
Walker-Smith was later cleared and reinstated after winning an appeal ; the appeal court's finding was based on the panel's conduct of the case, and gave no support to the MMR-autism hypothesis, which the official judgement described as lacking support from any respectable body of opinion.
In British English, the spelling judgment is correct when referring to a court's or judge's formal ruling, whereas the spelling judgement is used for other meanings.
In the long and very public case of " Campbell v Hogg ", he was close to all participants, and Elizabeth Campbell was so unhappy with his court's judgement that to overturn it she became the first woman to argue a case before the Privy Council.
Both Papon and Einaudi were thus vindicated by the court's judgement.
Sofri announced his decision not to make appeal, as such an act would, in his eyes, legitimate the court's judgement — and he adamantly maintained his innocence.

court's and was
The case was remanded to the District Court which did not apply the superior court's criteria ( on the grounds that in the interim, the Supreme Court had changed the applicable law ).
The ICJ judgment was backed up by the United Nations, whose charter potentially allowed sanctions or even the use of force to enforce the court's ruling.
They brought with them the Old Church Slavonic liturgy of the Eastern Orthodox Christian religion, written Slavic language, the version of which known as Chancery Slavonic was to serve the Lithuanian court's document-producing needs for a few centuries, and developed laws, turning Vilnius into a major center of their civilization.
This was the first time in the court's history it had ruled as such.
The U. S. was legally bound by the court's decision, had signed the treaty and made use of the court in other cases.
This was a relief for Nobunaga because he could now focus on Yoshiaki, who had openly declared hostility more than once, despite the imperial court's intervention.
On April 9, 2009, the court's decision was affirmed by the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
To prevent the appearance of any bias in the court's makeup, if there was a judge belonging to one member state on the panel and the other member state was not " represented ", they had the ability to select an ad hoc judge of their own nationality to hear the case.
The top court's decision was controversial as the Senegalese constitutional amendment, which places a two-term limit on the presidential office, was established about a year after Wade came into power in 2000.
In Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey, and New York, the highest courts formerly used variations of the term " Court of Errors ," which indicated that the court's primary purpose was to correct the errors of lower courts.
* Saddam and his lawyers ' contesting the court's authority and maintaining that he was still the President of Iraq.
Even during those years in which the court's actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal, the hierarchic organization persisted.
Even during those years in which the court's actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal, the hierarchic organization persisted.
On June 26, 1997, the Supreme Court upheld the Philadelphia court's decision in Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union, stating that the indecency provisions were an unconstitutional abridgement of the First Amendment right to free speech because they did not permit parents to decide for themselves what material was acceptable for their children, extended to non-commercial speech, and did not define " patently offensive ," a term with no prior legal meaning.
In a Washington Post-ABC News poll in early February 2010 it was found that roughly 80 % of Americans were opposed to the January 2010 Supreme court's ruling.
Royal justices supervised trials, answered questions as to law and announced the court's decision which was subject to appeal.
A federal district court's ruling that only González's father, and not his extended relatives, could petition for asylum on the boy's behalf was upheld by the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Even during those years in which the court's actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal, the hierarchic organization persisted.
Even during those years in which the court's actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal, the hierarchic organization persisted.
Even during those years in which the court's actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal, the hierarchic organization persisted.
Even during those years in which the court's actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal, the hierarchic organization persisted.
Even during those years in which the court's actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal, the hierarchic organization persisted.

court's and implemented
In some states, like Wisconsin, the mandatory membership requirement is implemented through an order of the state supreme court, which can be revoked or canceled at any time at the court's discretion.
The Little Rock School Board unanimously decided to comply with the high court's ruling and agreed to a gradual desegregation plan, which would be implemented in the 1958 school year.

court's and without
* The " impossibility for a court's independent resolution without expressing a lack of respect for a coordinate branch of the government ; or "
The first challenged the court's jurisdiction, the second asked the court to stay the action, and the third asked the court to dismiss the action without prejudice to the other side's right to bring the claims in another action or another court.
However, jurors can be released from the pool for several reasons including illness, prior commitments that can't be abandoned without hardship, change of address to outside the court's jurisdiction, travel or employment outside the jurisdiction at the time of duty, and others.
In 1896, his bankruptcy was discharged, but, as he could not sell the Hope Diamond without the court's permission, he was supported by his wife during these intervening years.
Due to costly court expenses and immediate jailing of those accused of criminal offenses, people in the Song preferred to settle disputes and quarrels privately, without the court's interference.
" The impossibility of a court's undertaking independent resolution without expressing lack of the respect due coordinate branches of government ;"
The court's initial decision sided with 407 ETR: on July 10, 2004, an independent arbitrator affirmed that 407 ETR has the ability to raise toll rates without first consulting the government.
He is the only Chief Justice other than Sir William Buell Richards to have served in that position without having first been a Puisne Justice on the court ( Richards was Chief Justice at the court's creation in 1875 ), and the only Chief Justice to have been appointed without any prior judicial experience.
" The Court of Appeals then reversed the trial court's ruling on liability, and the United States Supreme Court affirmed in a 6 – 3 vote in the case Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc., finding that the statement was made without actual malice, and therefore there was no libel.
It is also not a court's obligation to provide assistance when a party presents his or her case without legal representation.
He also had to turn down the part of Hale Caesar in The Expendables because he was not allowed to leave the United States without the court's approval.
* gratis dictum: an assertion that a person makes without being obligated to do so, or also a court's discussion of points or questions not raised by the record or its suggestion of rules not applicable in the case at bar.
" After challenging the court's jurisdiction without success and noting that the tide of public opinion had turned against him, Barstow declined to contest the fraud allegations and sent his resignation to the legislature on March 21, 1856, leaving the lieutenant governor, Arthur MacArthur, as acting governor.
In January 2004, the US Supreme Court refused without explanation to hear the lower court's ruling.
The Court made this point clear in Bradley, 13 Wall., at 357, where it stated " his erroneous matter in which court's jurisdiction was exercised, however it may have affected the validity of the act, did not make it any less a judicial act ; nor did it render the defendant liable to answer in damages for it at the suit of the plaintiff, as though the court had proceeded without having any jurisdiction whatever ....
The court's worry was that assignments without consideration might be used as instruments of fraud, to avoid creditors and tax collection.
Common examples are the declaratory judgment and the action to quiet title, and these remedies usually involve a court's determination of how the law applies to particular facts without any command to the parties.
This analysis concludes that the appeal was strategically flawed, and that the probable reason for the legal " carelessness " was that Kambanda was the face of genocide in Kigali ; no more time could be wasted before he was given the court's most severe punishment, without recourse to appeal.
In the court's view, the instructions allowed the jury to convict Andersen without proving that the firm knew it had broken the law or that there had been a link to any official proceeding that prohibited the destruction of documents.

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