Example sentences of "[noun pl] would [be] subject [prep] " in BNC.

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1 On March 21 Collor warned employers who dismissed workers that their books would be subject to " hostile inspection " and that they would be considered " unpatriotic " and guilty of " sabotaging " the economic programme .
2 I am grateful for my hon. Friend 's second point , because it is not yet widely understood by the three quarters of people who go into retirement with savings of their own that , as they approach retirement , their ability to build up those savings would be subject to a 9 per cent .
3 Secondly , the presumption behind such an approach is that once the characterisation has been made the content of natural justice is fixed and certain : all administrative matters would be subject to the same rules , as would all judicial or quasi-judicial .
4 In the long run full employment was to be achieved through the overall control of purchasing power , and monopolies and cartels would be subject to State supervision to promote efficiency and an expansionist economic policy .
5 A penalty imposed in such circumstances would be subject to the normal appeal provisions .
6 The hon. Member for Halifax asked whether national health service trusts would be subject to the same guidance rules and discharge procedures .
7 Doctors who performed illegal abortions would be subject to up to 10 years ' hard labour and fines not exceeding $100,000 .
8 Spelling out the pitfalls at the conference , Ronald Cowles , who left British Coal last year , said major new mining developments would be opposed by residents and conservation groups and new businesses would be subject to stringent planning , environment and health and safety controls .
9 Thus , for instance , a clause in a contract between a retailer and a consumer for the sale of goods which requires the consumer to indemnify the manufacturer against product liability claims brought by third parties injured by the goods would be subject to the reasonableness test under s4 .
10 Held , allowing the application , that the provision in article 5(1) of the 1968 Convention conferring special jurisdiction in respect of ‘ matters relating to a contract ’ required the existence of either a contractual relationship between the parties giving rise to actual contractual obligations , or a consensual relationship closely akin to a contract and with comparable obligations ; and that , since the transactions between the plaintiffs and defendants had been void ab initio , no contracts existed within the meaning of article 5(1) ; that the jurisdiction under article 5(3) was restricted to claims based on tort , delict or quasi-delict and did not extend to claims for restitution ; that article 6(1) was not applicable since under the terms of the order of Steyn J. the restitution claims would not be heard and determined together and , in any event , any irreconcilable judgments would be subject to a final decision of the House of Lords , binding in both England and Scotland ; and that , accordingly , there were no grounds for invoking the special jurisdiction to allow the defendants to be sued in England ( post , pp. 836F , 837B–D , 838E , 840B–D , 842H — 843B , G , G–H ) .
11 By the Submission of the Clergy of 1532 , convocation surrendered its position as an independent legislative body for the church , and agreed both that all existing canons should be reviewed by a royal commission composed of both lay and clerical members and that in the future ecclesiastical laws would be subject to royal assent .
12 All storage buildings exceeding 7080m3 in cubical extent , or exceeding 25 m in height with a floor area exceeding 929 m2 erected within the Inner London Boroughs would be subject to control under section 20 of the London Building Acts ( Amendment ) Act 1939 .
13 The concept underlying the proposed storage system was that files and documents would be subject to central management , achieved by keeping a record on the proposed indexing system .
14 Under the resolution overwhelmingly passed by Labour delegates , unions would be subject to fines and there would no such immunity from civil action if they acted illegally .
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