Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Appellate procedure in the United States" ¶ 56
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

permitting and trial
He also rebelled against the government in November 2005 on legislation permitting the detention of terrorist suspects for 90 days without trial.
Among some of the questions brought before the Court was whether the Act violated the 1868 Burlingame Treaty with China, whether hard labor and deportation constituted cruel and unusual punishment and thus violated the Eighth Amendment, whether the Act violated Fifth and Sixth Amendments protections by permitting imprisonment with hard labor without prior indictment or jury trial, whether the act violated the Fourteenth Amendment ’ s prohibition against the taking of property or liberty without due process, among other issues.
On September 13, following a hearing, Judge González issued a ruling permitting Lee to work for Google, but barring him from starting work on some technical projects until the case goes to trial in January 2006.
The trial court dismissed the claim as to the author and editor on the grounds that it lacked personal jurisdiction over the defendants, basing this finding on First Amendment concerns that permitting jurisdiction in such cases would chill free speech.
After 60 days, one may be further detained for a period of two years each, to be approved by the Minister of Home Affairs, thus permitting indefinite detention without trial.

permitting and de
The de facto standard of eight bits is a convenient power of two permitting the values 0 through 255 for one byte.
In Mandela: The Authorised Biography Sampson accuses de Klerk of permitting his ministers to build their own criminal empires.
He had perforce to swear an oath to the constitution, and a decree declared that retracting the oath, heading an army for the purpose of making war upon the nation, or permitting anyone to do so in his name would amount to de facto abdication.
The Spanish governor, Bernardo de Gálvez, later proved to be hospitable, permitting the Acadians to continue to speak their language, practice their native religion ( Roman Catholicism – which was also the official religion of Spain ), and otherwise pursue their livelihoods with minimal interference.
McClintock and five other senators, Orlando Parga, Luz Arce, Migdalia Padilla, Carlos Díaz, and Jorge de Castro Font, refused to follow the caucus ' decision, denying the unanimous consent required by Senate Rules 2 and 6 to remove a President, thus permitting McClintock to remain as Senate President.
Passenger flights were undertaken by two de Havilland Moth planes on Saturday afternoons and all day on Sundays, weather permitting.
Enrolment of the charters of 1166 and 1189 granting and confirming Birmingham's right to hold a marketThe transformation of Birmingham from the purely rural manor recorded in the Domesday Book started decisively in 1166, with the purchase by the Lord of the Manor Peter de Birmingham of a royal charter from Henry II permitting him to hold a weekly market " at his castle at Birmingham " and to charge tolls on the market's traffic.
Although not advocate of violent measures, as deputy to the National Convention with The Mountain, Merlin de Douai voted for the execution of King Louis XVI, and then, as a member of the council of legislation, he presented to the Convention the Law of Suspects ( 17 September 1793 ), permitting the detention of suspects ( a document backed by Georges Couthon and Maximilien Robespierre ).
The less adventurous can also reach the mountain, weather permitting, by helicopter tours available from the nearby Venezuelan city of Santa Elena de Uairén.
In 1341, nobleman and doctor Robert de Manners received license to crenellate his manor, permitting him to re-designate it as a " castle ".
He illustrated casuistry by citing mostly Jesuitic texts allowing excuses to abstain from fasting ( citing Vincenzo Filliucci's Moralium quaestionum de christianis officiis et casibus conscientiae ... tomus, Lyon, 1622 ; often cited by Escobar ); from giving to the poor ( indirectly citing Gabriel Vasquez from Diana ; for a monk temporarily defrocking himself to go to the brothel ( citing an exact quote of Sanchez from Escobar, who was curving around Pius IV's Contra sollicitantes and Pius V's Contra clericos papal bulls, the latter directed against sodomite clergy )); in the Seventh Letter, propositions allowing homicides ( even to the clergy ) and duels as long as the intention is not directed for revenge ; others permitting corruption of judges as long as it is not intended as corruption ; others allowing usury or Mohatra contracts ; casuistic propositions allowing robbery and stealing from one's master ; others allowing lying through the use of rhetorical " mental reservation " ( restrictio mentalis ; for instance: saying, loudly " I swear that ...", silently " I said that ...", and loudly again the object of the pledge ) and equivocations.
* The Canon de 75 modèle 1897, an innovative design that introduced, for the first time in field artillery history, a hydro-pneumatic recoil mechanism keeping the gun stable during firing and thus permitting high rates of accurate shell delivery.
With most of the Assembly still favouring a constitutional monarchy rather than a republic, the various groupings reached a compromise which left Louis XVI little more than a figurehead: he had perforce to swear an oath to the constitution, and a decree declared that retracting the oath, heading an army for the purpose of making war upon the nation, or permitting anyone to do so in his name would amount to de facto abdication.

permitting and court
The court declined to issue an injunction permitting worshippers back into the mosque.
* May 7-A court injunction is granted to Marc Hall, permitting him to bring a same-sex date to his high school prom
But the court, in a unanimous decision, ruled that the district can enact a new policy permitting " any printed material " approved by the superintendent to be distributed outside classroom time.
On his return from China, Saichō worked hard to win recognition from the court and " in the first month of 806, Saichō ’ s Tendai Lotus school ( Tendai-hokke-shū 天台法華宗 ) won official recognition when the court of the ailing emperor Kanmu issued another edict, this one permitting two annual ordinands ( nenbundosha ) for Saichō ’ s new school on Mt.
The court found that, " Under the circumstances, Johnson's burning of the flag constituted expressive conduct, permitting him to invoke the First Amendment ...
Furthermore, an alliance of the major automakers litigated the CARB regulation in court, resulting in a slackening of the ZEV stipulation, permitting the companies to produce super-low-emissions vehicles, natural gas vehicles, and hybrid cars in place of pure electrics.
Especially famous was the decree permitting the use of oil prepared by pagans, incorporated in the Mishnah with the same formula used in connection with decrees of Judah I, " Rabbi and his court permitted " ( Avodah Zarah ii.
A task force was organized in July 1980. to probe the Sunday slashings, and Watts was placed under sporadic surveillance, a November court order permitting officers to plant a homing device in his car.
Lippa married film marketing executive David Bloch in July 2008 in Los Angeles, California, shortly after that state's supreme court handed down a ruling permitting marriage of same-sex couples.
In 1966, however, the Board of Trustees got a court order that allowed them to change the non-sectarian clause in Stanford's charter so that they could expand the university's religious program, which included permitting sectarian worship services at Stanford Memorial Church.
3. And be it further enacted, That whenever, by or under the authority of the constitution or laws of any State, or the laws of any Territory, any act is or shall be required to done by any citizen as a prerequisite to qualify or entitle him to vote, the offer of any such citizen to perform the act required to be done as aforesaid shall, if it fail to be carried into execution by reason of the wrongful act or omission aforesaid of the person or officer charged with the duty of receiving or permitting such performance or offer to perform, or acting thereon, be deemed and held as a performance in law of such act ; and the person so offering and failing as aforesaid, and being otherwise qualified, shall be entitled to vote in the same manner and to the same extent as if he had in fact performed such act ; and any judge, inspector, or other officer of election whose duty it is or shall be to receive, count, certify, register, report, or give effect to the vote of any such citizen who shall wrongfully refuse or omit to receive, count, certify, register, report, or give effect to the vote of such citizen upon the presentation by him of his affidavit stating such offer and the time and place thereof, and the name of the officer or person whose duty it was to act thereon, and that he was wrongfully prevented by such person or officer from performing such act, shall for every such offence forfeit and pay the sum of five hundred dollars to the person aggrieved thereby, to be recovered by an action on the case, with full costs, and such allowance for counsel fees as the court shall deem just, and shall also for every such offence be guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall, on conviction thereof, be fined not less than five hundred dollars, or be imprisoned not less than one month and not more than one year, or both, at the discretion of the court .”
The lower court had ruled in 2009 that $ 20 million of life insurance on the life of Jack Teren was issued in violation of California insurable interest law thereby permitting Lincoln to void the policies without having to return $ 1. 6 million of premiums that an investor group had paid.
However, if the court declares a statute to be unconstitutional, and the state official still prosecutes someone for violating the statute, then § 2202 takes effect, permitting the federal court to take action such as issuing an injunction and holding an official who violates that injunction in contempt.
In the early 1980s the mosque obtained a court order permitting it to broadcast the call to prayer using loudspeakers, overruling objections from some of its neighbours ; it was the first mosque in America to do so.
The court determined that laws permitting stripping draft evaders of their citizenship are unconstitutional.
In response to the apparent inequity presented by this situation, most states have passed statutes permitting the defendant to make a special appearance in the courts of the state to contest jurisdiction, without further subjecting themselves to the jurisdiction of the court.
He retained to the end an intense love of country, which made him wish to die in Portugal, and in 1796 a royal decree permitting his return there and ordering the restoration of his goods was issued, but delays occurred in its execution, and the flight of the court to the Brazil as a result of the French invasion finally dashed his hopes.

permitting and only
Organized sports competition on Sundays was illegal in Pennsylvania until 1931, when challenged by the Philadelphia A's, the laws were changed permitting only baseball to be played on Sundays.
It was monarchic, hereditary and highly centralized, permitting the vote only to property-holders.
The " implementing " directive contains a " positive list " permitting irradiation of only dried aromatic herbs, spices, and vegetable seasonings.
At any rate, these theories are not the official teaching of the Catholic Church, but are only opinions that the Church does not condemn, permitting them to be held by its members, just as is the theory of possible salvation for infants dying without baptism.
A concept is tolerated inside the microkernel only if moving it outside the kernel, i. e., permitting competing implementations, would prevent the implementation of the system's required functionality.
The weak anthropic principle could then be applied to conclude that we ( as conscious beings ) would only exist in one of those few universes that happened to be finely tuned, permitting the existence of life with developed consciousness.
To do this, however, a non-historical and, to a degree, self-referential engagement with whatever set of ideas, feelings or practices would permit ( both the non-fixed concept and reality of ) such a continuity was required-a continuity permitting the possible experience, possible existence indeed not only of beings but of all differences as they appeared and tended to develop.
Primogeniture maintained family estates intact over generations by permitting only one heir per generation.
Computers often allocated only 6 bits for each character, permitting only 64 characters — assigning codes for A-Z, a-z, and 0-9 would leave only 2 codes: nowhere near enough.
The two rounds system tries to overcome this problem by permitting only two candidates in the second round, so that one must receive an absolute majority of votes.
Section 3 of the Twentieth Amendment replaced that provision of the Twelfth Amendment by changing the date for the commencement of Presidential terms to January 20, clarifying that the Vice President-elect would only act as President if the House has not chosen a President by January 20, and permitting the Congress to direct, through legislation, " who shall then act as President " if there is no President-elect or Vice President-elect by January 20.
In June 1980, it was introduced in the U. S. Also launched in the UK in 1980, it came with stereo playback and two mini headphone jacks, permitting two people to listen at the same time ( though it came with only one pair of MDR-3L2 headphones ).
The server can be secured by placing all the data in a secure, centralized location that is protected through permitting access to authorized personnel only.
Liberty rights and claim rights are the inverse of one another: a person has a liberty right permitting him to do something only if there is no other person who has a claim right forbidding him from doing so.
Veins appear blue because the subcutaneous fat absorbs low-frequency light, permitting only the highly energetic blue wavelengths to penetrate through to the dark vein and reflect back to the viewer.
This reduction left Silver City's fares only slightly higher than the Dover — Calais ferry fares of British Railways ' Southern Region and, together with the service's earlier extension permitting the carriage of cyles and motor cycles, helped establish the airline's ferry services as a serious competitor to the railways.
The government of genocidaires had been recognized only by France, and the deployment of French troops had the effect of protecting their Hutu allies, permitting the slaughter of Tutsis to continue in the French controlled area.
The Kansas law permitting segregated schools allowed them only " below the high school level.
A concept is tolerated inside the microkernel only if moving it outside the kernel, i. e., permitting competing implementations, would prevent the implementation of the system's required functionality.
Two ferries operate on the route-a fast foot passenger only catamaran ferry called " Rathlin Express " and a larger ferry, owned by the Scottish Government, called " MV Canna " which carries both foot passengers and a small number of vehicles, weather permitting.
Currently, the Kelleys Island Ferry is the only line that runs year-round ( weather permitting ) between the island and the mainland.
Visitors are not allowed to take pictures, and press photographers are required to sign agreements permitting only a single publication in a defined context, followed by a return of the copyright to Von Hagens.

3.223 seconds.