Example sentences of "available to [art] court " in BNC.

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1 Marian welcomes the more interventionist role available to the Court under the new Act which has only been in force since October 1991 .
2 ( b ) The interests of justice which must ensure that all relevant evidence is available to the court .
3 I direct that an up-to-date psychiatric report be available to the court and to the parties and that the local authority make arrangements for that to be done through the secure unit .
4 Indeed , none of these statements , apart from two short but damning extracts from Zaidie 's statement which the prosecution put into evidence , came to light at all ( and consequently were not available to the Court of Appeal ) until 20 July 1990 , three days before the presentation of the petition for special leave to appeal , when they were furnished to the defendant 's advisers at the insistence of Mr. Guthrie who had by then been instructed on behalf of the Crown .
5 It requires the court to have regard in particular to : ( a ) the ascertainable wishes and feelings of the child concerned ( considered in the light of his age and understanding ) ; ( b ) his physical , emotional and educational needs ; ( c ) the likely effect on him of any change in his circumstances ; ( d ) his age , sex , background and any characteristics of his which the court considers relevant ; ( e ) any harm which he has suffered or is at risk of suffering ; ( f ) how capable each of his parents , and any other person in relation to whom the court considers the question to be relevant , is of meeting his needs ; and ( g ) the range of powers available to the court .
6 It was looked at by my hon. Friend the Under-Secretary of State and was available to the Court of Appeal when the appeal was turned down .
7 To attend all directions appointments and hearings , unless excused , and to advise the court orally or in writing : ( i ) whether the child is of sufficient understanding for any purpose including refusal to submit to medical or psychiatric examination or other assessment ; ( ii ) what the child 's wishes are in relation to any matter relevant to the proceedings including his own attendance at court ; ( iii ) which is the appropriate forum for the proceedings ; ( iv ) what is the appropriate timing of the proceedings ; ( v ) what options are available to the court , the suitability of each and what order should be made .
8 In Re M ( a Minor ) ( Child Abuse : Evidence ) [ 1986 ] 1 FLR 293 Latey J expressed the view that all such interviews should be recorded on video tape and that such evidence should then be available to the court in the interests of justice .
9 These are : ( i ) the ascertainable wishes and feelings of the child concerned ( considered in the light of his age and understanding ) ; ( ii ) his physical , emotional and educational needs ; ( iii ) the likely effect on him of any change in his circumstances ; ( iv ) his age , sex , background and any characteristics of his which the court considers relevant ; ( v ) any harm which he has suffered or is at risk of suffering ; ( vi ) how capable each of his parents , and any other person in relation to whom the court considers the question to be relevant , is of meeting his needs ; ( vii ) the range of powers available to the court under the Act .
10 The seventh MP , Mr Graham Bright , Luton South , wants more penalties available to the courts against organisers of unlicensed entertainments such as acid house parties .
11 But the second proposal seems to contemplate an expanded role for judicial review as a way of controlling government activity ; and increasing the sources of information available to the courts in the way contemplated by the first proposal might so change perceptions of the judicial role that it , too , would lead to an expanded conception of the role of judicial review .
12 In addition to ending corporal punishment as a penalty available to the courts , the Criminal Justice Act 1948 abolished penal servitude and hard labour ; established new arrangements for the supervision of discharged prisoners ; put preventive detention and borstal training onto a new footing ; introduced corrective training , detention centres and attendance centres ; and revised the law on probation .
13 In the light of modern knowledge of crime and its causes and of modern penal practice here and abroad , to re-examine the concepts and purposes which should underlie the punishment and treatment of offenders in England and Wales ; to report how far they are realised by the penalties and methods of treatment available to the courts , and whether any changes in these , or in the arrangements and responsibility for selecting the sentences to be imposed on particular offenders , are desirable : to review the work of the services and institutions dealing with offenders , and the responsibility for their administration : and to make recommendations .
14 As long before as November 1966 , Jenkins had asked the Advisory Council on the Penal System to consider what changes and additions might be made in the range of non-custodial penalties that were available to the courts .
15 Thus the courts were clearly subservient to the commands of the Communist Party , although it should be noted that the degree of independence available to the courts has varied over time : in the 1930s it was minimal , but after 1956 it became greater .
16 The answer to the third is that the Criminal Justice Act 1991 introduced new guidelines which can be passed from the magistrates to the social services to ensure that from October this year juveniles can be remanded in custody under certain conditions not previously available to the courts .
17 New sentences became available to the courts with the passage of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 , and quite right too .
18 It is quite clear that this power available to the courts is essential to deal with contempt of court when it emerges as a result of abuse of trade union power or trade union positions .
19 That offence , unlike the section 139 offence , requires proof of intent to cause injury on the part of the knife carrier , and tough penalties are rightly available to the courts .
20 But the Government accepts that for persistent offenders some kind of youth detention must also be available to the courts .
21 Home office Minister , Michael Jack told the delegates of the tougher sentencing available to the courts from October .
22 The maximum fine a court can impose is £5,000 , and prison terms , as well as disqualification from driving , are also available to the courts .
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