An injunction does not appear on the debit side of the balance sheet as a liability. |
|
The lessee and the reversioners brought separate actions against the company for an injunction and damages in respect of the nuisance and injury. |
|
Breaching this injunction is an arrestable offence carrying up to 5 years in prison. |
|
With the support of the Attorney General an injunction could be sought in proceedings for public nuisance. |
|
That injunction was of unlimited duration, although it would inevitably end when the ward reached the age of majority. |
|
Because the plaintiff seeks a mandatory injunction, it must show its claim is almost certain to succeed. |
|
Nobody would dispute that I have jurisdiction to grant a mandatory injunction. |
|
I am satisfied that I have jurisdiction to award damages in lieu of an injunction. |
|
The defendants claim damages which they allege that they suffered from the granting of the injunction. |
|
And let's not be in any doubt I'll stop the whole tour with an injunction if there's any funny business about royalties. |
|
The injunction prohibits Helm from using the name on his Website or in any commercial context. |
|
The railroad won an injunction to freeze Dringer's assets, halting his lucrative business. |
|
The Court has already imposed an interim injunction against the cleared area being cropped. |
|
It should not grant an injunction where to do so will deprive a plaintiff of advantages in the foreign forum. |
|
A US court will not grant an anti-suit injunction if the foreign forum is the only one available. |
|
So too might going to court to obtain injunction to restrain continued threatened assault against you by your political opponent. |
|
In any event, it is not disputed that an account of profits arises irrespective of the grant of an injunction. |
|
Under the court injunction, an Inuk in Nunavut cannot be fined for having an unregistered gun. |
|
Rendered in plummy grays, the canvases seem to be a dutiful application of the classical injunction that painting should imitate poetry. |
|
I think Sir Harry Gibbs said something about the necessity for a contradictor, too, in one of those injunction cases. |
|
|
The injunction we seek is not one that in any way interferes with existing contractual rights or obligations. |
|
The injunction permanently banning the group's presence outside the construction site was lifted for the duration of the day. |
|
I think there was actually a separate application for an interlocutory injunction, was there not? |
|
The plaintiff had failed to satisfy Justice Himel that an interim interlocutory injunction should be granted. |
|
In that case the Court of Appeal refused to grant an interlocutory injunction restraining breach of confidence or breach of copyright. |
|
This is not simply a case about an injunction to restrain threatened future conduct. |
|
The incident on the pilot boat spurred harbour bosses to serve an injunction on the striking boatmen, preventing them from a repeat protest. |
|
A court's competence to grant an anti-suit injunction seems to derive from its jurisdiction to adjudicate. |
|
An earlier documentary about her trips there was never shown after the television company made a failed legal bid to lift the injunction. |
|
While the church saw the importance of art as a method of instruction, it also faced a biblical injunction against images. |
|
A cloud passed over his face as he struggled with the information and his companion's jaw dropped in disbelief at the usurer's injunction. |
|
Even with the superinjunction, the report appeared on the whistle-blower Web site Wikileaks three days after the injunction. |
|
This requirement is based on the Biblical injunction that during Passover no chometz be eaten. |
|
The injunction to turn the other cheek is often quoted, out of context, to justify craven submission. |
|
On September 16, the courts issued an injunction asking squatters to leave the building. |
|
Recently ousted in a boardroom coup, he sought an injunction against his removal and the recruitment of a new managing director. |
|
In granting the plaintiff's motion for an injunction Justice Patel found that Napster was liable. |
|
The company wants an injunction and is currently investigating monetary damages. |
|
As a general rule an injunction will be refused only where the interference with the claimant's right is trifling or slight. |
|
An injunction prevented him from profiting from allegedly misleadingly advertised data protection notification services. |
|
|
The remedies available with regard to the fruits of the trespass in the hands of the trespasser would be an injunction, and we would accept that. |
|
That was on the basis that all other arguments for the grant of the injunction had failed. |
|
I will hear argument on whether the injunction should be extended pending any appeal, if permission to appeal is sought and obtained. |
|
In addition to the claim for prerogative relief, the prosecutor also seeks an injunction against the third respondent. |
|
Now the tantric injunction to respect, honor and revere the body makes sense. |
|
The plaintiffs sought an injunction requiring the defendants to abate the nuisance as well as damages. |
|
Microsoft said that would not do and it should have an absolute injunction, both as regards copyright and trade marks. |
|
The agency decided to keep two-thirds of sea lion critical habitat closed to fishing, and the judge lifted his injunction. |
|
Hibernian was granted an injunction last Wednesday, continuing a restraining order against the cashing of bank drafts at the centre of the fraud. |
|
For myself, I cannot accept that the jurisdiction of the court to require such an undertaking only exists where a Mareva injunction is ordered. |
|
Magistrates also ordered that he be evicted and imposed an injunction to keep him away from her for a year. |
|
Ankrah secured an ex-parte injunction preventing Elias and Associates from replacing her or withdrawing her from the pageant. |
|
Why didn't they slap an injunction on samoosas, koeksisters, bobotie, braaivleis, witblits or mampoer while they were about it? |
|
The ordinary Mareva injunction restricts a defendant from dealing with his own assets. |
|
The men were prepared to purge their contempt of court simultaneously with Shell collapsing its injunction against them. |
|
For these same proselytes, it meanwhile fulfilled the scriptural injunction of a temple service garment of utmost simplicity. |
|
He once famously got an injunction banning anyone from repeating the allegation that he dyes his hair. |
|
I have been advised by my bank manager that any release of money needs to be authorised by the solicitors who initiated the freezing injunction. |
|
Just ten days later Oldham County Court granted an injunction forcing the landlady to allow her tenant back into the property. |
|
The injunction also prohibits picketers from blocking the scabs' entry to the plant. |
|
|
A public nuisance is a crime indictable at common law and restrainable by injunction at the suit of the Attorney-General. |
|
Despite winning an injunction against CSL plans to reflag the ship and crew it with Ukranians, the workers have been told to leave the ship on full pay. |
|
The fact that some prescriptive rules are valuable does not mean that every grammatical injunction should be obeyed. |
|
After that, Cissy got a court injunction to take Whitney to rehab by force. |
|
They have sent a solicitor's letter to the nursery warning that they are considering taking out an injunction over its use of the green area, known as the rec. |
|
The group has obtained an injunction to prevent the demolition of the building. |
|
We will try to negotiate with the landowner and if that fails regretfully we may have to apply for a court injunction but this is very much a position of last resort. |
|
The perpetrator could also apply for an injunction restraining the company from dismissing him or taking disciplinary action following an investigation. |
|
She won an injunction to stop the process and launched her legal bid. |
|
It is, after all, only reviewing a decline of a stay of an injunction to stop withholding licenses. |
|
A German court placed an injunction against Kamphuis and his ISP company, CB3ROB, to stop him from putting Pirate Bay back online. |
|
Once the injunction fell through, it was like a weight off my shoulders. |
|
The judgment of the Court of Appeal contains statements concerning the rights of a mortgagor to obtain an injunction against a mortgagee that have given us some concern. |
|
Transfer of the Garden City Lands to Richmond hit a snag last week after the Musqueam First Nation received a temporary court injunction preventing the move. |
|
The burqa and a smaller type of face mask, the niqab, has been banned by municipal injunction in the cities and towns of Ghent, Antwerp, Sint-Truiden, Lebbeke and Maaseik. |
|
But there is nothing in this case which would warrant the grant of an injunction against the third respondent unless the decision of the Tribunal was void. |
|
There has been argument about whether or not there should be an extension of the interlocutory injunction which is to expire today for a period of indeterminate length. |
|
Nine organizations and four individual journalists filed a federal suit in New York, seeking an injunction against enforcement of restrictions on movement. |
|
I have found him to be in wilful and contumacious breach of the injunction on him, which I am quite certain he knew perfectly well he had to obey in every respect. |
|
Apart from being more effective and more suited to victims' needs, the cost of a county court injunction is a fraction of the cost of a criminal case. |
|
|
Of course, it's not like the FCC is about to embrace full-frontal male nudity on the early evening news, but at least they've thrown off the blanket injunction. |
|
All three prerequisites must coincide for an injunction to be appropriate. |
|
He also granted an injunction effectively banning future use of that part of the lyric which infringed copyright, and preventing any new pressings of the recording. |
|
The first order says it seeks an injunction prohibiting certain conduct. |
|
He eventually ruled he couldn't grant the request for an injunction because he would then be deciding the question of rights without hearing full evidence and argument. |
|
According to Lord Bridge, two obstacles stood in the way of the granting of the injunction. |
|
An injunction can require someone to do something, like clean up an oil spill or remove a spite fence. |
|
The injunction is an equitable remedy, that is, a remedy that originated in the English courts of equity. |
|
Counterinjunctions are injunctions that stop or reverse the enforcement of another injunction. |
|
A party that fails to comply with an injunction faces criminal or civil penalties, including possible monetary sanctions and even imprisonment. |
|
Local authorities in both France and the UK called for the closure of Sangatte, and Eurotunnel twice sought an injunction against the centre. |
|
An injunction is an equitable remedy in the form of a court order that compels a party to do or refrain from specific acts. |
|
The Lord Chancellor, Lord Ellesmere, issued a common injunction from the Chancery prohibiting the enforcement of the common law order. |
|
As well as an injunction to prevent the defendant dumping waste in the woods, damages were also awarded to pay for the harm to the woods. |
|
In the end BAA won a very much more limited injunction and the camp went ahead amid considerable worldwide publicity. |
|
The Judges also held that granting the injunction would not constitute a restraint of trade. |
|
Americas sued in what's called a motion for preliminary injunction to block Richmond and MRP from using eminent domain. |
|
In July 2007 BAA sought an injunction preventing potential protesters involved in the Camp for Climate Action from approaching Heathrow Airport. |
|
The police unblurred the suspect's photograph when the injunction against revealing his identity was lifted. |
|
Despite a Chancery injunction against them, the two men continued with their action. |
|
|
On 11 October 1990 the House of Lords gave its judgment in the light of the ECJ's ruling and granted an injunction in favour of Factortame. |
|
These court-ordered strangleholds such as the Napster injunction create multi-million dollar monopolies for special interests. |
|
An automatic stay by virtue of posting a supersedeas bond is only available when the injunction is mandatory. |
|
He first noted that the injunction sought by Factortame would in fact be available in all Member States except the UK and Denmark. |
|
Secondly, the court had no jurisdiction to grant an interim injunction against the Crown. |
|
The High Court of Justice grants relief through orders such as injunction, mandamus and Habeas Corpus, as well as through declaratory judgments. |
|
Alternative civil remedies include restitution or transfer of property, or an injunction to restrain or order certain actions. |
|
Greenpeace bosses were last night desperately trying to stave off bankruptcy as all their UK assets were frozen in the injunction. |
|
A strike was announced for May 2010, British Airways again sought an injunction. |
|
Social historians took eagerly to the affirmation of historicity and the injunction to attend to child-rearing. |
|
Action for injunction would prohibit the person from performing the act specified in the contract. |
|
Related to orders for specific performance, an injunction may be requested when the contract prohibits a certain action. |
|
The FTC will seek a preliminary injunction to halt defendants' practices during the pendency of the litigation. |
|
Both an order for specific performance and an injunction are discretionary remedies, originating for the most part in equity. |
|
In England and Wales, a contract may be enforced by use of a claim, or in urgent cases by applying for an interim injunction to prevent a breach. |
|
The equitable remedy of specific performance, enforceable through an injunction, may be available if damages are insufficient. |
|
Before it could be challenged in court, the injunction was then varied to permit reporting of the question. |
|
Different federal and state courts sometimes have slightly different requirements for obtaining a permanent injunction. |
|
If the TRO is contested, the court must decide whether to issue a preliminary injunction. |
|
The most effective injunction issued was to compel owners to deconvert buildings illegally converted to their original architectural structure. |
|
|
These features of the injunction allow a court granting one to manage the behavior of the parties. |
|
When an injunction is given, it can be enforced with equitable enforcement mechanisms such as contempt. |
|
On 2 March 2010 Campaign Against Arms Trade and The Corner House were successful in gaining a High Court injunction on the Serious Fraud Office's settlement with BAE Systems. |
|
Additionally, the Board won all 30 injunction and all 16 representation cases before the lower courts, a rate of success unequalled by any other federal agency. |
|
The injunction specifically targeted anyone belonging to, or protesting in the name of, AirportWatch, The No Third Runway Action Group and Plane Stupid. |
|
Police sealed off the entrance to the square as it is private property, a High Court injunction having previously been granted against public access to the square. |
|
Based on the Biblical injunction against cooking a kid in its mother's milk, this rule is mostly derived from the Oral Torah, the Talmud and Rabbinic law. |
|
In March 1961 McClory read an advance copy, and he and Whittingham immediately petitioned the High Court in London for an injunction to stop publication. |
|
Sportswear firm Nike last night announced its intention to seek a High Court injunction to stop the Savacentre chain selling polo shirts it claims are fakes. |
|
District Court for the Central District of California granted ABS' motion for a preliminary injunction against Oakland, California-based Pontes Financial Group Ltd. |
|
According to this story, which charters the injunction against nuns making a living through the practice of medicine, a bhiksuni should not also be a vaidyika. |
|
In December 2009, a ballot for strike action over Christmas received a high level of support, action was blocked by a court injunction that deemed the ballot illegal. |
|
Senior counsel Rajiv Nayar, appearing for the producer, said the law is well settled that the prepublication injunction can't be granted in such cases. |
|
If the Court grants that relief, the plaintiff will then seek a preliminary injunction to maintain the current state of affairs until a trial can take place. |
|
Court proceedings launched by the Financial Services Authority led to an injunction banning de Dietrich and his company ETIC Solutions from taking any more deposits. |
|
Lawyers for the residents of Dale Farm in Essex had applied for a temporary injunction to stop Basildon Borough Council evicting the families from midnight. |
|
Another way these two remedies are distinguished is that the declaratory judgment is sometimes available at an earlier point in a dispute than the injunction. |
|
Yet minutes before the procedure was to take place in a Buenos Aires hospital, an antiabortion group won an injunction from a lower-court judge to halt the termination. |
|
The injunction has been a major stumbling block in the railroad's plans to build a propane transloading facility at its railyard in North Grafton. |
|
A few weeks after the deal, ITV went to the High Court to get an injunction as it believed their bid details had been leaked before the decision was taken. |
|
|
Osric and Polonius, especially, seem to respect this injunction. |
|
When deciding whether to give an injunction, and deciding what its scope should be, courts give special attention to questions of fairness and good faith. |
|