Example sentences of "of the [noun] of appeal " in BNC.

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1 Just as there was no absolute separation of the rhetoric of appeal directed to the country as compared with parliament but some differences of emphasis , so printed material circulated to decision-makers , without ignoring humanity and justice , probably relied more on evidence drawn from Privy Council and parliamentary investigations and focused on questions of national interest and economic benefit .
2 In People v. Rosario ( 1961 ) 213 N.Y.S. 2d 448 four members of the Court of Appeals of New York , adopting the view of the United States Supreme Court in Jencks v. United States ( 1957 ) 353 U.S. 657 , ruled that the entire previous statements of prosecution witnesses ought to be shown to defence counsel after the direct examination with a view to his cross-examining those witnesses and attacking their credibility , saying that counsel were best able to decide what use could be made of the statements , whereas three members of the court took a narrower view and , following the line of authority which had hitherto prevailed in New York , held that defence counsel could examine and use only those portions of a statement which , according to the view of the trial judge , contained variances from a witness 's evidence .
3 The most recent , involving the claim that his mental state might not have been adequately conveyed to the jury during his original trial , had been upheld by Judge John Noonan of the Court of Appeals of the ninth US Circuit based in San Francisco , on March 30 , 1990 .
4 On Feb. 7 , 1990 , Bush nominated Clarence Thomas , 41 , a black conservative lawyer , as judge of the Court of Appeals in Washington .
5 AS A measure for reducing delays in the disposal of appeals in the Civil Division of the Court of Appeal , Lord Donaldson of Lymington , the Master of the Rolls , said the categories of cases in which unsuccessful litigants were required to obtain leave to appeal should be extended .
6 Lord Donaldson gave the seventh annual review of the organisation and administration of the Civil Division of the Court of Appeal , on 12 October 1989 .
7 Screening appeals The justification for the present system whereby some categories of appeal could only be brought by leave of the trial judge or of the Court of Appeal was threefold : 1 .
8 And in response to public concern about a small but significant number of miscarriages of justice , we have appointed a Royal Commission to review aspects of the criminal justice system , including the conduct of investigations , the handling of forensic evidence , and the powers of the Court of Appeal .
9 This was despite the fact that one member of the Court of Appeal , Sir Denys Buckley , thought the reasons for the order to be ‘ meagre ’ .
10 Parker J. , giving the judgment of the Court of Appeal , stated that :
11 Indeed , Tan not only confirms Corbett at the level of the Court of Appeal , but extends it beyond marriage into , it appears , a case of general application , an outcome which Ormrod J. may not have intended or desired .
12 Weldon ( No. 1 ) , which was before another division of the Court of Appeal as judgment was being given in Republic of Haiti v.
13 It is rare , if not unknown , for the same voices to be heard if a sentence is too severe , although the Criminal Division of the Court of Appeal frequently reduces sentences for just that reason .
14 Appeal against any non-mandatory sentence requires the leave of the Court of Appeal ( Criminal Division ) , or of a single High Court judge acting on its behalf .
15 Until the Public Records Act 1958 the care and preservation of public records were in the hands of the Master of the Rolls , an anachronistic responsibility for a senior judge who in his modern incarnation is fully occupied in presiding over the civil work of the Court of Appeal .
16 It also seems that the work of the Court of Appeal is predominantly the determination of appeals involving review .
17 If the claim is for less , then leave of either the county court judge or of the Court of Appeal is required , unless the decision includes or preserves an injunction ( County Courts Act 1984 , s.77 ; County Courts Appeal Order 1981 , SI 1981 : No. 1749 ) .
18 A single judge of the Court of Appeal may dispose of the application and there is no appeal against such a decision ( Supreme Court Act 1981 , s.54(6) ) .
19 It is important that the grounds of appeal are full because any omission can only be cured with the leave of the Court of Appeal .
20 The Powers of the Court of Appeal
21 The civil division of the Court of Appeal enjoys much wider powers to order a retrial than the criminal division .
22 Managing the Business of the Court of Appeal
23 Significant changes were made by the Supreme Court Act 1981 in the arrangements for the management of the business of the civil division of the Court of Appeal .
24 The importance of the role of the Master of the Rolls as head of the civil division of the Court of Appeal should not be overlooked .
25 The problem was that there were two previous decisions of the Court of Appeal , by which the court would normally be bound , which would , contrary to the justice of the case , have denied a remedy in the case before the court .
26 The case was taken on appeal to the House of Lords , who upheld the decision of the Court of Appeal on the merits , but rebuked the Court of Appeal for not following its own previous decisions .
27 As part of the campaign to increase the efficiency of the civil division of the Court of Appeal , the Master of the Rolls , Sir John Donaldson ( as he then was ) , has introduced a number of innovations following the recommendations of Lord Scarman 's Working Party ( Practice Note , [ 1982 ] 1 WLR 1312 , as amended by Practice Note , [ 1983 ] 1 WLR 598 ) .
28 This teamwork aspect of the work of the Court of Appeal would be lost if written briefs were read individually by judges prior to limited oral argument .
29 In those cases where no time for appealing is fixed by statute or by order of the House , the time for appealing is three months from the date the judgment of the Court of Appeal was handed down .
30 in respect of which the trial judge was bound by a decision of the Court of Appeal or House of Lords and which in either case was fully considered by the trial judge or in the previous decisions by which the trial judge was bound ; and
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