Example sentences of "case [art] court " in BNC.

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1 In such a case the court has power to stop the prosecution in its tracks .
2 In another case the court upheld an elector 's right to see council documents ( a statutory right without qualification , as here ) unless his request ‘ was so oppressive as to amount to an abuse of the right ’ .
3 Conceivably ( although I would reserve the point ) in an extreme case the court might have to decline to try the issues .
4 Further , in a recent case the Court has held that unless an individual agreement can be shown in concrete terms to produce an effect on trade , it does not fall within Article 85(1) .
5 In one case the court confirmed the Commission 's finding that there was evidence of abusive conduct where United Brands ' prices in certain banana markets within the EC were excessive in relation to the economic value of the product supplied and that they differed considerably from one EC market to another .
6 You may feel at the end of the day that you need to hear from the officer of the case and he is still present obviously in case the court wishes
7 In the present case the Court had not been informed how many hours remained under the original order ; the later order would be quashed and an order for 60 hours substituted .
8 In the present case the Court of Appeal on 4 November 1991 refused leave to the present petitioner , Strathmore Group Ltd. , to appeal from the judgment of the Court of Appeal dated 4 October 1991 .
9 In each case the court considered whether the interference complained of was necessary in a democratic society .
10 In the present case the Court of Appeal ( Nourse and Stuart-Smith L.JJ. ) ( 1991 ) 89 L.G.R. 729 , upholding Judge Butter Q.C .
11 In the present case the Court of Appeal were bound by the decisions In re Midland Railway Co. 's Agreement and Ashburn 's case .
12 I would therefore also give my views on this aspect in case the court should consider that the registration requirements are capable of constituting ‘ detailed rules for the utilisation of the quotas ’ within the meaning of article 5(2) of Regulation ( E.E.C. ) No. 170/83 .
13 In this case the court was concerned with the question whether the transactions between the bank and the wife should be set aside on the ground of undue influence exerted over the wife by the husband .
14 By a notice of appeal dated 22 July 1991 the administrators appealed on the grounds , inter alia , that ( 1 ) the judge had erred in law in holding that the court had no jurisdiction to make any order under section 238 of the Act of 1986 against the bank ; ( 2 ) the judge should have held that the words ‘ any person ’ in section 238 meant ( in the case of a company ) any company , whether or not registered in England and Wales , or having a place of business in England and Wales , or carrying on business in England and Wales at the time of the transaction complained of ; alternatively , that those words ( in the case of a company ) meant any company with a sufficient connection with England and Wales : and that , on the facts of the case , there was a sufficient connection ; and in either case the court accordingly had jurisdiction to entertain the originating application against the bank , and to grant leave under rule 12.12 of the Insolvency Rules 1986 to serve the bank in Jersey ; and ( 3 ) in construing section 238 of the Act of 1986 the judge had erred in failing ( i ) to hold that the bank , even though a Jersey company , was within the class of persons with respect to whom Parliament was to be presumed to be legislating in section 238 ; ( ii ) to give any or any sufficient weight to the mischief which the section was intended to remedy , and/or to the disastrous practical consequences for all insolvencies with any international element if the operation of the section were limited to those within England and Wales at the time of the transaction complained of ; ( iii ) to give any or any sufficient weight to the legislative context of the section and related sections ; and ( iv ) to give any or any sufficient weight to the fact that the transactions dealt with by the sections necessarily had a connection with England and Wales in that they involved a disposition of the property of a person or company the subject of insolvency proceedings before the courts of England and Wales .
15 In that case the court was considering applications for judicial review by four prisoners serving sentences of imprisonment for life imposed in the discretion of the trial judges for offences other than murder ( manslaughter by reason of diminished responsibility , false imprisonment of and sexual offences with boys , and arson by two of the appellants ) .
16 In this case the court is concerned to construe the Act of 1976 : what is relevant is the ministerial statement as to the effect of that Act .
17 In that case the court may well reduce his damages from the £500 .
18 In that case the court has a discretion ( in order to avoid injustice ) to award damages at the higher level of £750 ( i.e. by reference to the market price at July 15 instead of the later contract delivery date of December 1 ) , Johnson v. Agnew ( 1979 H.L. ) .
19 In this case the Court also said the trader who ‘ clocks ’ the odometer to zero ( or some other figure so absurdly low that a customer who reads it would not believe it ) would still be guilty .
20 In this case the court gave a further reason why the false statement was not caught by section 14 , namely that it related to the price at which the goods were offered for supply and section 14 did not cover false statements about prices .
21 In each case the court held the promise to be binding on the party making it , even though under the old common law it might be difficult to find any consideration for it .
22 More important , in the second case the Court has taken a major step by allowing notions of classical freedom of contract to play an important part in its interpretation of the Directive .
23 In the Judith Ward case the Court of Appeal , criticising three senior forensic scientists for being partisan to the police , said that one lesson to be learned from that miscarriage of justice was the clear duty of such people ‘ to act in the cause of justice ’ and that ought to be spelt out to ‘ all engaged or to be engaged in forensic services in the clearest terms ’ .
24 343 ) that where a common law court had decided a case the Court of Chancery had no power to intervene between the parties …
25 In a recent case the Court of Appeal has held that there certainly may be a lease without rent : Ashburn Anstalt v Arnold ( 1988 ) 2 WLR 706 ( see Chapter 11 ) .
26 In the Nutricia case the court laid down various guidelines .
27 A discount of 10-15 per cent is not uncommon and in an extreme case the Court of Appeal refused to disturb a discount of 50 per cent ( Charles Follett Ltd v Cabtell Investments Ltd [ 1987 ] 2 EGLR 88 ) .
28 In each case the court seeks to assess and award damages that are equivalent to the loss sustained by the plaintiff — in each case the same heads of damage are recoverable and in each case similar deductions have to be made .
29 In every case the court must decide whether it was reasonable to incur the expense in question , and that will depend upon the facts of the particular case .
30 Even in the case of a regular wage-earner or salaried employee , there might be complications ; for example , the plaintiff might claim that he would have been promoted to a more remunerative post ( in which case the court must assess his prospects of promotion and award damages accordingly ) or the defendant may claim that the plaintiff 's employer had suffered severe business setbacks that necessitated redundancies and that the plaintiff would have lost his employment ( in which case the court must consider all the circumstances and award as damages what it estimates to have been the plaintiff 's net loss ) .
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