A suit in equity was instituted between two parties resident in England to enforce an equitable lien to land situate abroad. |
|
When the EPA found companies fouling our air and water, it instituted a program of pollution credits. |
|
I'm going to make sure that I've instituted my fitness plan in order for me to have a Bavarian Cream Pie. |
|
She instituted proceedings against her landlord for breach of his repairing covenant and he counterclaimed for possession. |
|
The Fast of Atonement was instituted in expiation of a mortal sin and observed as a day of penance and mourning. |
|
The treatments were typically instituted because the patients suffered from malformed cervixes which blocked the entry of sperm into the uterus. |
|
Germany instituted a scrappage program earlier this year, followed by France and Britain. |
|
Afterwards a state of emergency will be declared and martial law instituted. |
|
That issue was pursued further in the first of three court proceedings instituted by Milstein. |
|
Precautions for droplet infection should be instituted, including the wearing of masks and rigorous disinfection and hygiene procedures. |
|
The Court instituted a constitutional rule that is party-blind and that disfavors systems with ad hoc recount standards. |
|
It is the Crown who has instituted the charges and it is the Crown who sought and obtained the search warrant for the documents. |
|
Singularity, order and repetition are instituted to check accumulation and sprawl. |
|
By 1957 the laboratory benches had become so crowded that a cleanup had to be instituted. |
|
In the 1980s, the Nicaraguan government instituted the first bilingual education programs for native people, taught in the Miskito language. |
|
The power corporation instituted rotating blackouts for periods in the community while the power plant was being repaired. |
|
He also instituted the School's first moot court program, providing for further practical experience for future litigators. |
|
Twelve years ago Kerry MacLean and her husband instituted a daily meditation session for their blended family of seven. |
|
A muru would redress an intentional offence and could also be instituted for unintentional affronts or offences. |
|
Against Colorado, Texas began looking down field more and instituted reverses, pitchouts and the shuttle pass. |
|
|
The question is, how are they to unite the whole people around a programme of land reform instituted only in Caroni? |
|
The applicant then instituted fresh proceedings for judicial review of the Tribunal's decision in the Federal Magistrates Court. |
|
To that end, the entire defense has been souped up, as position changes were instituted in the spring to get more speed on the field. |
|
The Administration has instituted no-fly zones above plants, while companies are hiring more guards. |
|
Many departments already have instituted changes to methodology that have drawn growing numbers to literary studies. |
|
Rather than a Hall of Fame, I would like to see a Hall of Shame instituted for Australian sport. |
|
Not surprisingly, relatively few prosecutions have been instituted since insider dealing has been on the statute book. |
|
In women with peritoneal carcinomatosis or malignant ascites, treatment for ovarian cancer is instituted if the CA 125 level is elevated. |
|
Woodrow Wilson instituted the modern practice of delivering it to congress in person. |
|
The new system of Payment by Results instituted what was in effect merit pay for teachers. |
|
At one time it had instituted proceedings against more than 130 banks for colluding to keep prices high. |
|
About a decade ago, seeking to give managers more power, the department instituted binding arbitration for disciplining officers. |
|
He challenged calls from the opposition parties for a commission of inquiry to be instituted to probe his wife's appointment. |
|
It reserved special scorn for the General Mining Law of 1872, which has handed over huge swaths of public land to miners since it was instituted. |
|
How many churchgoers really believe, as matter of historical fact, that Jesus instituted the mass? |
|
If instituted, there would be mass civil disobedience and refusal to participate. |
|
Others, however, have reduced the subsidies to students and instituted tuition fees. |
|
The Lord instituted Passover at the time of the Israelites ' exodus out of Egypt. |
|
Early discharge and outpatient surgery procedures are being instituted to control the cost of health care. |
|
Medical treatment should be instituted to prevent further complications and give you symptomatic relief. |
|
|
She named the young man executor of her will and instituted him as the sole and universal heir of her modest estate. |
|
Perhaps an ongoing program could be instituted to inform people of the benefits of following safe driving procedures. |
|
It did not authorise the giving of a notice to a person who was already a defendant in penalty proceedings instituted by the Commission. |
|
A company in liquidation has instituted proceedings under the Trade Practices Act in general equitable principle in the Federal Court. |
|
Under Maximilien Robespierre, the Jacobins instituted extreme policies to crush enemies of the state. |
|
According to the Mishnah and Jerusalem Talmud, a complex system of internal controls was instituted to sell and distribute items. |
|
Emperor Meiji initiated instituted wide sweeping political, civil and social reforms which transformed Japan into a significant world power. |
|
More importantly, it debunks the idea that educational reform is instituted to enhance the skills of the labour force. |
|
One of the first programs instituted by the Japanese was land reform that made the landowner the sole owner. |
|
In 1822 the British authorities instituted trading fairs to regulate and regularize what until then had been restricted trade. |
|
We instituted a policy several years ago-we do not install computers in classrooms. |
|
With no criminal proceedings pending in the case, the family instituted civil proceedings. |
|
The work-time experiments instituted a seemingly gender-neutral scheme that reduced the length of the full-time work week for all employees. |
|
With more teams popping up and ringers being fought over, some sort of order would have to be instituted. |
|
Chiefly for this reason the malt kilns were in 1549 closed for two years and a survey of disforestation for eight miles around was instituted. |
|
The Army has instituted numerous goals to increase the use of commercial purchases. |
|
To maintain public order, the authorities instituted a regular, salaried police force. |
|
As is typical, the levying of the fine is a new policy instituted by the local government without adequately notifying the public. |
|
A yard crew bus service was instituted to meet these buses and move employees to their place of work. |
|
After the wife instituted proceedings in the Family Court, a share which was held by the husband in the trustee company, was transferred to the children of the marriage. |
|
|
This situation can only be overturned if power is instituted from below. |
|
Lynching was instituted to crush the manhood of the enfranchised black. |
|
Divorce proceedings were instituted with the inevitable claims for corollary relief including of course for equalization of the net family properties. |
|
Many universities report that they instituted the zones to protect free speech rights and prevent demonstrations from interfering with other campus activities. |
|
Therefore marriage is not to be entered into unadvisedly or lightly, but reverently, deliberately, and in accordance with the purposes for which it was instituted by God. |
|
It has instituted billing by which a subscriber has the right to receive a single bill even if it uses the services provided by several unbundled telecom companies. |
|
In 1980, a system of compulsory registration for the draft was instituted. |
|
Use of chemical warfare was instituted to destroy food crops. |
|
This law instituted a royalty scheme for webcasts of copyrighted material. |
|
The company has instituted several new policies with the goal of reducing waste. |
|
The division of tetrarchies between Antipas and Philip had been instituted by Rome, but it divided territory that Judaism considered to be part of Israel's heritage. |
|
The basic coinage instituted by Augustus comprised the copper quadrans, brass semis, copper as, brass dupondius and sestertius, silver denarius, and gold aureus. |
|
He would replace a government that is instituted to protect our inalienable rights with one that enforces his own barbaric moral code and bigotry. |
|
The Namibian Government has instituted investigations regarding the shooting by their officer and has expressed regret over this unfortunate incident. |
|
The applicant has instituted in relation to this matter a great deal of expensive, prolonged, collateral litigation in none of which has he been successful. |
|
The adapted course is set to be instituted in high schools nationwide this fall. |
|
So, providing that any appeals are not instituted or disposed of, we can then file an amended statement of claim with such further imputations as we care to rely upon. |
|
Today the firm apologised for the incident and pledged it had instituted an action plan to prevent a repeat of the incident at its Low Moor plant. |
|
The award has been instituted to recognise literary excellence among Indian authors and is currently the only literary award of its kind in the country. |
|
He proposed keeping the ferry that had been instituted after the subway connection was knocked out. |
|
|
The worst abuses were officially abolished, but the yoke of oppression did return, and new laws depriving people of their freedom and their political rights were instituted. |
|
After the democratic transformation of 1994, programs for land restitution, redistribution, and reform were instituted, but progress has been slow. |
|
The Asiatic Society of Mumbai has instituted six fellowships of one-year duration in Indology, Social Sciences, History of Maharashtra and on an area concerning Japan. |
|
As more and more segments of society have instituted random drug testing via urinalysis, you had to know that someone would develop a way to cheat on the test. |
|
As a part of the process of the hearing of that application, or during the process of the hearing of that application in the MRT, the High Court proceedings were instituted. |
|
Even if a proper capability development process was instituted, it could never have restrained Hitler's insistent demands for weapons of retaliation. |
|
Several other biennales have been instituted on the Venice model, some of them general and others devoted to a specific category of art, such as naive painting or printmaking. |
|
The 2001 rules limited fraternization among agents and informants and instituted a Confidential Informant Review Committee that included federal prosecutors. |
|
Instead, the rites of Levitical sacrifice are inaugurated and the priesthood is instituted as a sort of permanent penitential reminder to the people of their sinfulness. |
|
The European Union has instituted some tough new measures requiring that all cut flowers be whole, fresh and free of animal or vegetable parasites. |
|
The so-called sandwich generation is composed of 25,000 workers who are being denied benefits as a result of pension reforms instituted in the 1990s that left them out. |
|
Both have instituted cuts on the order of 20 percent for every household. |
|
They have instituted new policies to increase public safety. |
|
And consequently he humanized the company. He instituted excellent employee benefits. |
|
In addition, he repealed the taxes that Caligula had instituted on food, and further reduced taxes on communities suffering drought or famine. |
|
Soon after coming into power, Claudius instituted games to be held in honor of his father on the latter's birthday. |
|
He officially instituted the change during his censorship but they did not survive his reign. |
|
Many of the public works instituted in his reign were based on plans first suggested by Julius Caesar. |
|
To pay off debts incurred during the Castille campaign, the prince instituted a hearth tax. |
|
He instituted the new policy of having children walk through a metal detector to enter school. |
|
|
If children were early instituted, knowledge would insensibly insinuate itself. |
|
Mary had always rejected the break with Rome instituted by her father and the establishment of Protestantism by her brother's regents. |
|
Of the seven sacraments, all Anglicans recognise Baptism and the Eucharist as being directly instituted by Christ. |
|
James instituted a wholesale purge of those in offices under the crown opposed to James's plan. |
|
Addington opposed emancipation, instituted annual accounts, abolished income tax and began a programme of disarmament. |
|
This was instituted by the Judicature Acts, with the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1876 giving an almost limitless right of appeal to the Lords. |
|
In 1974, administrative counties and county boroughs were abolished, and a major reform was instituted. |
|
This rare honour suggests Hadrian may have visited the site and instituted the bridge on his tour of Britain. |
|
This dynasty instituted imperial tradition in Rome and frustrated any attempt to reestablish a Republic. |
|
Antoninus made few initial changes when he became emperor, leaving intact as far as possible the arrangements instituted by Hadrian. |
|
As a way out of this deadly and futile custom the system of 'wergilds' was instituted. |
|
In 2014, Pope Francis instituted the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors for the safeguarding of minors. |
|
In accordance with his reading of the New Testament, he rejected baptism of infants and instituted baptism only of believing adults. |
|
While on the Farne Islands, Cuthbert instituted special laws to protect the ducks and other seabirds nesting on the islands. |
|
Around 1701 he instituted weekly clubs for the practice of music, which flourished in Oxford as well as in London. |
|
In addition to performing traditional ceremonies, she also instituted new practices. |
|
Civil resistance prevented the Act from being enforced, and organized boycotts of British goods were instituted. |
|
It instituted a system of special courts to review disputes relating to voter qualifications. |
|
It was instituted by the emperor Augustus, and was accompanied by a series of brutal military campaigns. |
|
The Soviet Union instituted a new communist government in Poland, analogous to much of the rest of the Eastern Bloc. |
|
|
Most schools came under state control in the Victorian era, a formal state school system was instituted after the Second World War. |
|
Councillors are subject to a Code of Conduct instituted by the Ethical Standards in Public Life etc. |
|
The remaining parliamentary chamber, the House of Commons, instituted a Council of State to execute laws and to direct administrative policy. |
|
A similar system of NHS reference numbers has since been instituted by NHS England and Wales. |
|
In 508 BC, Cleisthenes instituted the world's first democratic system of government in Athens. |
|
On 1 April 1900, the Board of Education Act 1899 abolished the committee and instituted a new board, headed by a president. |
|
The Acts of Union 1800, instituted in reaction to the Irish Rebellion of 1798, created the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. |
|
The commission of the peace was originally instituted in Scotland in the 16th century. |
|
In 2002 the City of Edinburgh, Scotland's capital, instituted a post of makar, known as the Edinburgh Makar. |
|
Five of these clubs were, at the time of founding the Scottish Football Union, already members of the previously instituted Rugby Football Union. |
|
Henry yielded to the outcry and instituted a formal inquiry into Simon's administration. |
|
The economy also boomed due to the agricultural development programs instituted by the kings who promoted massive cultivation of palms. |
|
Some countries have instituted a research ban to protect great apes from any kind of scientific testing. |
|
In British overseas territories that have instituted this practice, the relevant governor delivers the speech. |
|
In 1861 President Lincoln instituted a naval blockade of Southern ports, which crippled the South's efforts to obtain war materiel from abroad. |
|
The remaining house of Parliament, the House of Commons, instituted a Council of State to execute laws and to direct administrative policy. |
|
There was an instituted mandatory conscription of the rural peasantry into the Red Army. |
|
In 1262, the Althing ratified union with Norway and royal authority was instituted in Iceland. |
|
Until 1689, mutiny was regulated in England by Articles of War instituted by the monarch and effective only in a period of war. |
|
He built schools on the five principal islands, and instituted compulsory education some thirty years before it became the rule on the mainland. |
|
|
The 13 historic counties of Wales, however, were abandoned entirely for administrative purposes, and 8 new ones instituted. |
|
During the war the British had instituted a new system of blockade, by which they penned in the main French fleets at anchor in Brest and Toulon. |
|
In 1867 Red Funnel instituted a service crossing the River Medina between Cowes and East Cowes. |
|
He returned to Saxony in 782 and instituted a code of law and appointed counts, both Saxon and Frank. |
|
The criminal appeal was a private criminal prosecution instituted by the accuser directly against the accused. |
|
In later years, the Church instituted the Inquisition, an official body charged with the suppression of heresy. |
|
Charlemagne returned in 782 to Saxony and instituted a code of law and appointed counts, both Saxon and Frank. |
|
A second feast day was instituted on 30 August in commemoration of this event. |
|
Due to the racial caste system instituted in colonial Haiti, Haitian mulattoes became the nation's social elite and racially privileged. |
|
Alexander instituted a special rite for the closing of a holy door, as well. |
|
He instituted elections for parliament, gave women the right to vote, and released all political prisoners. |
|
Nezahualcoyotl also instituted a policy in the Acolhua lands of granting subject kings tributary holdings in lands far from their capitals. |
|
Moctezuma issued new laws that further separated nobles from commoners and instituted the death penalty for adultery and other offenses. |
|
If the bishop admits the patron's presentation, the clerk so admitted is next to be instituted by him. |
|
Mao's government carried out mass executions of landowners, instituted collectivisation and implemented the Laogai camp system. |
|
In June 2017, he instituted a programme of spraying church steps with water to prevent tourists from using such areas as picnic spots. |
|
The term reflects the Lutheran belief that the liturgy was instituted by God. |
|
Zwingli had instituted fundamental reforms, while Bullinger consolidated and refined them. |
|
Lutherans hold that Baptism is a saving work of God, mandated and instituted by Jesus Christ. |
|
In 2000, Tuscany's regional authorities instituted an annual holiday on 30 November to commemorate the event. |
|
|
This allowed for the overriding of marriage laws instituted in the Act but did not impinge on the legal standing of de facto relationships. |
|
Henry II also instituted the Assize of Clarendon in 1166, which allowed for jury trials and reduced the number of trials by combat. |
|
Many of the changes Millis instituted were designed to mimic requirements placed on other agencies by the Administrative Procedure Act. |
|
Effective sanitation practices, if instituted and adhered to in time, are usually sufficient to stop an epidemic. |
|
The 1909 System instituted compulsory military service of eight years on active duty and five years in the reserves. |
|
The 1836 law instituted a significantly more rigorous application process, including the establishment of an examination system. |
|
One of the changes he instituted was the feudal system where he gave properties to men with the understanding that they owed him service. |
|
The DEA has banned some basic types, but much research needs to be done. Some states have instituted bans on spice and spicelike products. |
|
It was instituted in 1983, at the height of the AIDS crisis. |
|
The Rev Mike Wilkins was officially instituted at Holy Trinity Church by the Bishop of Wakefield the Rt Rev Stephen Platten. |
|
With the advent of the electrical industry's deregulation, Southern California Edison instituted baselines involving future energy consumption. |
|
On Tuesday, the reforms Pope Francis worked to be instituted at the scandal-plagued bank created a massive drop in its 2013 profits. |
|
The Ross Field Experimental Station for Malaria at Karnal, Punjab was instituted in 1926 by IRFA to further researches in Malariology. |
|
The NEP for silica builds on policies and procedures instituted under the 1996 Special Emphasis Program. |
|
Sterling refused her check and instituted eviction proceedings. |
|
He instituted the McRoberts maneuver followed by suprapubic pressure and the Woods maneuver, all of which were unsuccessful. |
|
For this reason, you should not say as does the pantheist that the law instituted and proclaimed by the government always is basic law. |
|
The tax law changes that were instituted in '86 changed the tax benefits associated with domiciling in Bermuda. |
|
Lloyd instituted the practice of dramaturges who work as go-betweens between director and playwright. |
|
It instituted a Cold Jet dry ice cleaning program that resulted in more cleaning online with less disassembly. |
|
|
Considering the stabilised haemodynamic situation, veno-venous ECMO was instituted the first day after admission. |
|
To keep the service short and in anticipation of a small congregation, she instituted Communion by Intinction. |
|
Even a cursory reading of IRC section 121 reveals that when Congress instituted it, the intent was to exclude the vast majority of personal residence gains from tax. |
|
In other words, a reimposition of a stricter form of the dhimmi status has been instituted by certain groups like Boko Haram and ISIS or ISIL in the past couple of years. |
|
Another target for Kerry is the backdoor draft Bush has instituted with his stop-loss order compelling soldiers to stay in Iraq after their term of enlistment has expired. |
|
Alfred Nobel invented dynamite and instituted the Nobel Prizes. |
|
Monarchies, including the Capetian dynasty in France, were overthrown, and other reforms that allegedly broke with Europe's feudal, aristocratic past were instituted. |
|
The Russian government instituted the township courts in 1861 in order to provide peasants a forum in which to handle minor suits and petty crime. |
|
They had differed on when to hold the election, and whether the tax relief should be instituted for both years of the biennium or just the second year. |
|
Breitbart and Fox News commentators instituted a debate about reverse racism, completely turning around the historic definition of the term racism. |
|
In order to reduce the aversiveness of the restudy, they instituted a conditional pass when the answer did not quite meet mastery criteria, but was close. |
|
Rationing was instituted, and there were food and fuel shortages. |
|
Among other atrocities, he had instituted a new version of republican marriage, which involved tying a naked man and woman together and drowning them. |
|
He established salt and tea monopolies based on Yuan institutions, eliminated corruption, restored minted currency, opened iron foundries, and instituted fish taxes. |
|
The British Admiralty also instituted a new policy that the three American heavy frigates should not be engaged except by a ship of the line or frigates in squadron strength. |
|
After developing this mill, Slater instituted principles of management which he had learned from Strutt and Arkwright to teach workers to be skilled mechanics. |
|
London, in an effort to reduce traffic within the city, instituted the London congestion charge in 2003, effectively making all roads within the city tolled. |
|
The Cavalieri di San Marco was the only order of chivalry ever instituted in Venice, and no citizen could accept or join a foreign order without the government's consent. |
|
He had inherited a government in debt, and in an effort to raise more revenue for his expansionist wars, he instituted a series of increasingly unpopular and burdensome taxes. |
|
Escalating, he instituted dragonnades, which included the occupation and looting of Huguenot homes by military troops, in an effort to forcibly convert them. |
|
|
In 705, he returned to Constantinople with the armies of the Bulgarian khan Tervel, retook the throne, and instituted a reign of terror against his enemies. |
|
Planned maintenance system for surface missile ships has been instituted to increase system readiness through a major reduction in system downtime. |
|
The acting president Mihai Ghimpu instituted the Commission for constitutional reform in Moldova to adopt a new version of the Constitution of Moldova. |
|
The event was instituted in commemoration of the fabled run of the Greek soldier Pheidippides, a messenger from the Battle of Marathon to Athens, who reported the victory. |
|
Vespasian and Mucianus renewed old taxes and instituted new ones, increased the tribute of the provinces, and kept a watchful eye upon the treasury officials. |
|
It is delivered by the majority of Scottish secondary schools as part of the Higher Still reforms instituted in 2000 by the SQA and the Scottish Executive. |
|
It is also instituted as a rank in the Ghana Air Force and Royal New Zealand Air Force as member of the Commonwealth of Nations, however not in practice. |
|
Gladstone's first premiership instituted reforms in the British Army, civil service, and local government to cut restrictions on individual advancement. |
|
This pattern slowed due to the 1975 Land Reform program instituted by the government, which provided incentives for people to stay in rural areas. |
|
Considering the distribution of such material a seditious act, the authorities instituted reforms and replaced several staff during Marx's attendance. |
|
Under the new royal charter instituted 2017, the corporation must publish an annual report to Ofcom, outlining its plans and public service obligations for the next year. |
|
The Sir John Barbirolli Memorial Foundation of the Royal Philharmonic Society was instituted after his death to assist young musicians with the purchase of instruments. |
|
Roosevelt's New Deal instituted significant social insurance policies. |
|
Poland has instituted freedom of press since the fall of communism, a system under which the media was heavily politically controlled and censored. |
|
Conscious of the need to strengthen the Club, Yorkshire instituted a Colts team of young players, but replaced Iddison as captain at the end of the 1872 season. |
|
Augustus instituted the first permanent medical corps in the Roman army. |
|
Journeys are free of charge within the vicinity of the airport, by reason of a green travel plan instituted by the BAA to reduce staff demands for parking space. |
|
The cause of the Analytical Society had now triumphed, and the Cambridge Mathematical Journal had been instituted by Gregory and Robert Leslie Ellis. |
|
The Marine Corps has instituted a martial-arts program in which leathernecks are indoctrinated in a new code of honor, the Ethical Marine Warrior. |
|
The most conventional functional definition of a sacrament is that it is an outward sign, instituted by Christ, that conveys an inward, spiritual grace through Christ. |
|
|
Will the sinner knowingly spurn exomologesis, which has been instituted by God for his restoration? that exomologesis which restored the king of Babylon to his royal throne? |
|
These plans were rapidly revised and better plans were instituted. |
|