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Page "Nuisance" ¶ 32
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Some Related Sentences

remedy and for
Strindberg's remedy for this condition was to tear down the old structures and build anew from the ground up.
Meynell's remedy for Thompson's despondent mood was typically practical.
When I first came across Samuel Johnson's pronouncement, `` the remedy for the ills of life is palliative rather than radical '', it seemed to me to sum up the profoundest of political and social truths.
at least I have only one remedy for anything of this kind in my collection, one for hastening delayed menstruation.
My lawyer told me that his mother used a similar remedy for cuts and wounds ; ;
Another remedy was oil of eucalyptus, used as well for chilblains.
It may, in addition, send the case back (" remand " or " remit ") to the lower court for further proceedings to remedy the defect.
Paneloux is at pains to emphasize that God did not will the calamity: " He looked on the evil-doing in the town with compassion ; only when there was no other remedy did He turn His face away, in order to force people to face the truth about their life " In Paneloux's view, even the terrible suffering caused by the plague works ultimately for good.
Alfred sought to remedy this through an ambitious court-centred programme of translating into English the books he deemed " most necessary for all men to know.
William of Tyre explains that " after suffering intolerably from the fever for several days, he ordered physicians of the Greek, Syrian, and other nations noted for skill in diseases to be called and insisted that they give him some purgative remedy.
Bay leaf has been used as an herbal remedy for headaches.
Historically, the remedy for such violations have been petitions for common law writs, such as quo warranto.
The remedy for it is repentance, on which he insists.
Lewin ( 2001 ) reports that "... consumption of fresh, warm camel feces has been recommended by Bedouins as a remedy for bacterial dysentery ; its efficacy ( probably attributable to the antibiotic subtilisin from Bacillus subtilis ) was confirmed by German soldiers in Africa during World War II ".
Confess, for your death has no remedy "-
As early as 1866, the Civil Rights Act provided a remedy for intentional race discrimination in employment by private employers and state and local public employers.
The eventual remedy for this was a return to the original store and forward approach of bridging, where the packet would be read into a buffer on the switch in its entirety, verified against its checksum and then forwarded, but using more powerful application-specific integrated circuits.
Some proponents of school vouchers, including the Sutherland Institute and many supporters of the Utah voucher effort, see it as a remedy for the negative cultural impact caused by under-performing public schools, which falls disproportionately on demographic minorities.
Article 13 provides for the right for an effective remedy before national authorities for violations of rights under the Convention.
The inability to obtain a remedy before a national court for an infringement of a Convention right is thus a free-standing and separately actionable infringement of the Convention.

remedy and private
The ADA allows private plaintiffs to receive only injunctive relief ( a court order requiring the public accommodation to remedy violations of the accessibility regulations ) and attorneys ' fees, and does not provide monetary rewards to private plaintiffs who sue non-compliant businesses.
The petitioner may seek a legal remedy if the state or another private person has acted unlawfully.
" This bias, the government argued, deprived women of the equal protection of the laws, and the private civil remedy of VAWA was meant to redress " both the States ' bias and deter future instances of gender discrimination in the state courts.
The Court responded that, even if there had been gender-based disparate treatment by state authorities in this case, precedents such as the Civil Rights Cases limit the manner in which Congress may remedy discrimination, and require that a civil remedy be directed at a State or state actor instead of a private party.
According to the Court, however, the Civil Rights Cases held that the Fourteenth Amendment did not allow Congress to target private parties in order to remedy the unequal enforcement of state laws.
" For these reasons, we conclude that the States should retain substantial latitude in their efforts to enforce a legal remedy for defamatory falsehood injurious to the reputation of a private individual ," Powell said.
Concerns have been expressed that the use of the distraint remedy may result in violations of human rights, such as Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, the right to respect for private life.
Shortly after returning to private life, he began to complain about the low value of Bank of the Commonwealth notes – then worth about half of par – and petitioned the legislature to remedy the situation.
On February 8, 2011 the European Court of Human Rights decided to merge and accept two cases of four couples regarding the breach of article 8 ( respect of private and family life ) combined with article 14 ( freedom from discrimination ) and article 13 ( effective remedy ).
Implied cause of action is a term used in United States statutory and constitutional law for circumstances when a court will determine that a law that creates rights also allows private parties to bring a lawsuit, even though no such remedy is explicitly provided for in the law.
The Court, in an opinion by Justice Brennan, laid down a rule that it will imply a private right of action for monetary damages where no other federal remedy is provided for the vindication of a constitutional right, based on the principle that for every wrong, there is a remedy.
The plaintiff appealed, contending that Congress acted in light of similar language in Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which the Supreme Court had already found to imply a private remedy, and to which Congress had allowed attorney fees ( which would be unnecessary absent a private right of action ).
Did Congress intend a private remedy to be implied from the Title IX?

remedy and nuisance
In Tappenden v Artus 2 QB 185 Diplock LJ referred to a lien as a " self help " remedy, like " other primitive remedies such as abatement of nuisance, self-defence or ejection of trespassers to land ".
Under the common law, the only remedy for a nuisance was the payment of damages.
However, with the development of the courts of equity, the remedy of an injunction became available to prevent a defendant from repeating the activity that caused the nuisance, and specifying punishment for contempt if the defendant is in breach of such an injunction.
The remedy for a public nuisance is by information, indictment, summary procedure or abatement.
In some matters, the law allows the party to take the remedy into his own hands, and to " abate " the nuisance.
The remedy for nuisance is by interdict, or action.

remedy and is
A traditional Lao explanation is that the moon was being swallowed by a toad, and the remedy was to make all possible noise, ideally with firearms.
There is only a judgment that grants money damages or some other kind of equitable remedy such as restitution or a permanent injunction.
Korzybski's remedy was to deny identity ; in this example, to be aware continually that " Elizabeth " is not what we call her.
A current urban regeneration scheme, Elevate East Lancashire, is attempting to remedy these problems.
Where a wrongful death statute exists, the compensation or other remedy available is limited to the remedy specified in the statute ( typically, an upper limit on the amount of damages ).
However, Motif itself is expected to be released as free software in the near future to remedy this.
In legal terminology, a complaint is any formal legal document that sets out the facts and legal reasons ( see: cause of action ) that the filing party or parties ( the plaintiff ( s )) believes are sufficient to support a claim against the party or parties against whom the claim is brought ( the defendant ( s )) that entitles the plaintiff ( s ) to a remedy ( either money damages or injunctive relief )
Doyle and Wright define restitutionary damages as being a monetary remedy that is measured according to the defendant's gain rather than the plaintiff's loss.
The really difficult question, and one which is currently unanswered, relates to what wrongs should allow this remedy.
The economics of the public sector is one example, since where markets fail, some kind of regulatory or government programme is the remedy.
One widely-used remedy is the method of instrumental variables ( IV ).
Whether the marketplace should be or is free is disputed ; many assert that government intervention is necessary to remedy market failure that is held to be an inevitable result of absolute adherence to free market principles.
If the open string is in tune, but sharp or flat when frets are pressed, the bridge saddle position can be adjusted with a screwdriver or hex key to remedy the problem.
* Thompson's poem is also the source of the phrase, " with all deliberate speed ," used by the Supreme Court in Brown II, the remedy phase of the famous decision on school desegregation.
Most civil law jurisdictions provide a similar remedy for those unlawfully detained, but this is not always called " habeas corpus ".

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