It ought to make its judicature, as it were, something exterior to the State. |
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Do you say it is not a matter incidental to the execution of a power vested in the federal judicature? |
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Well, the State is part of the Commonwealth judicature and we are the top of the national judicature. |
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Just as we were there protecting the electoral system and the governmental system, here we are asked to protect the judicature. |
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At one time the Freemen of York exerted a commanding influence in commerce, government and the judicature of the city. |
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It is all part and parcel, it seems, of the slow pace of the hearing of proceedings in the federal judicature of this country. |
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That Taiwan's judicature is not independent is well-known, but it is not Chuang's fault. |
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The judicature was known to the people of Australia when they passed this referendum that introduced that. |
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The notion that a perverse finding of fact does not reveal an error of law in a court of law of our judicature is one I will never accept never, ever. |
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Wynn was keen to abolish the separate judicature for Wales, though he resisted associated proposals for the amalgamation and partitioning of the Welsh counties. |
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As authorized or required through provincial judicature acts, individual courts can also undertake educational programs. |
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That would lead the Community judicature to interpret national procedural law and thus go beyond its jurisdiction. |
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When assessing the concept of 'agreement', the Community judicature does not make a distinction between horizontal and vertical infringements. |
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They deal with the introduction of judicature in the early pages. |
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The Attorney-General seems to take the view that it is part of his role to undermine the structure of the federal judicature which he has erected through these courts. |
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Mitrinoski negated this, noting that they discussed reforms in judicature at their meeting. |
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These are legal categories which have gained a clear and precise definition in the judicature of Hungary over the past twenty years, and as such, they cannot be moulded to fit the needs of any ruling political party. |
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The Swedish ombudsman's responsibility now comprises civil affairs, including the judicature, the police, prisons, and the public administration, both central and local, but excluding ministers and the monarch. |
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The appeal is directed against the requirements of the duty to state reasons on a selection board and the review criteria of the Community judicature. |
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According to the proponents of this proposal an international agreement involving the Community would be needed in order to confer competence on the Community judicature over European patents. |
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The procedure at issue also disturbs the equilibrium between the 'executive' institutions and the Community judicature and, in general terms, jeopardises the adjudication system established by the Treaty. |
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By withdrawing the decision at issue, the Commission was seeking not to withdraw the act in question so as to comply with the principle of legality, but to avoid review by the Community judicature. |
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Under that system, natural or legal persons to whom a Community measure is addressed which directly and individually concerns them may challenge it before the Community judicature by way of an action for annulment. |
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In addition to the ordinary courts, Monaco's judicature includes courts with specialized functions whose role is to resolve certain conflicts or protect certain rights. |
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The institution of British civil government in 1749 at Nova Scotia brought the judicature system peculiar to that form, and the grand jury was inherent to it. |
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The first Rules of the new Supreme Court of Judicature adopted the Chancery practice. |
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The High Court of Judicature shall have the power to approve, admit and enroll advocates, vakils and attorneys-at-law. |
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Overruling the defendants' objection, the Supreme Court of Judicature declared that it is the jury's responsibility to determine the credibility of the evidence. |
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This was instituted by the Judicature Acts, with the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1876 giving an almost limitless right of appeal to the Lords. |
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The Supreme Court of Judicature was formed in 1873 from the merging of various courts then existing, such as the. |
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The Court of Judicature is the most important superior court of Northern Ireland. |
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The solution adopted by the Judicature Acts of 1873 and 1875 was to fuse the administration of the two. |
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Grand juries were introduced by the Judicature Act 1874 and have been used on a very limited number of occasions. |
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The English Judicature Act passed 1873 through 1875 abolished the separate actions of trespass and trespass on the case. |
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The Judicature Reforms in the 1870s effected a procedural fusion of the two bodies of law, ending their institutional separation. |
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Equally, courts have power under the provincial Judicature Acts to apply equity. |
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The authors of the Judicature Act had before them two systems of pleading, both of which were open to criticism. |
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The keystone of the structure created by the Judicature Acts was a strong court of appeal. |
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Although assumpsit was abolished by the Judicature Act 1873, the term has survived and is used today to denote an action for damages for breach of a simple contract. |
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The Bill for an Act with this short title may have been known as a Supreme Court of Judicature Bill, or as a Judicature Bill during its passage through Parliament. |
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The Judicature Acts are a series of Acts of Parliament, beginning in the 1870s, which aimed to fuse the hitherto split system of courts in England and Wales. |
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These provisions were brought into effect after amendment with the Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1875, and the Court of Chancery ceased to exist. |
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Under the Indian legal system, jurisdiction to issue 'prerogative writs' is given to the Supreme Court, and to the High Courts of Judicature of all Indian states. |
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Until 1 October 2009 its name was the Supreme Court of Judicature. |
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