Example sentences of "[verb] rights of [noun] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Instead , I have given the Law Society the power to grant rights of audience in the higher courts , but subject to regulations relating to competence and conduct , which will require the approval of senior judges as well as myself . ’
2 Throughout a painstaking series of consultations with the Committee , the Society has striven to offer a workable system ensuring that all solicitors seeking rights of audience in the higher courts will have all the requisite skills and experience .
3 Lord Donaldson attacked the White Paper 's suggestion that it might be in the public interest to allow other professions , such as accountants , to be given rights of audience in the courts .
4 By 1994 or so , solicitors in independent practice will have rights of audience in the higher courts .
5 In the celebrated case of ( Re : M ) quoted in The Times , 9 May 1985 , the Court of Appeal ruled that an adoption order with a condition giving rights of access to the natural mother would only be made in the most unusual and exceptional circumstances .
6 In order to overcome the problems which flow from this lack of legal personality , the Crown Proceedings Act 1947 was passed giving rights of action against the executive branch of government either by suing specified departments in their own name or by suing the Attorney-General on behalf of the Crown .
7 It is not , however , necessary that the defendant should assert rights of ownership over the goods : taking for the purposes of acquiring a lien or of temporary use have been held to be conversion .
8 The usual legal connotations of ownership are therefore irrelevant , but the possession of information , or the ability to control it , may nevertheless be of great significance ; in an entirely trivial sense the paper or computer tape on which information is recorded can be owned , and while this does not confer rights of ownership over the information itself , this distinction may seem empty if what really matters is control of access to and use of information .
9 ‘ although in the Act of 1990 Parliament introduced a new statutory machinery for supervising and regulating the rules for education and conduct for those who are to have rights of audience in the courts it decided not to interfere expressly with the jurisdiction of the Inns , under the supervision of the judges , to decide who were fit and proper persons to be admitted to the Inns for training or their liberty to decide the criteria which should dictate their admissions policy .
10 Lord Mackay of Clashfern , the Lord Chancellor , was last night urged to clarify the government position on who should be allowed rights of audience in the higher courts .
11 Nevertheless , it is good practice to grant the tenant express rights of access over the common parts of the building .
12 Poland would have guaranteed rights of access to the port , but Danzigers were offered fragile assurances by the League that the Poles would not interfere with the internal affairs of the city-state beyond running the railways , maintaining a Post Office , a customs service , a small garrison and munitions dump on the Westerplatte peninsula , and exercising nominal control over the city s foreign policy .
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