It is well established that all persons presiding over adjudicative tribunals owe a duty of fairness to the parties who appear before them. |
|
Moreover, the presiding officer can admit previous evidence extracted by torture. |
|
It's there in the white-clad high priest presiding in the temple at the summit of a dormant volcano. |
|
So far as the applicants are concerned, the presiding judge committed jurisdictional error. |
|
It stated that no advocate would be permitted to make disparaging and derogatory remarks against the presiding judge. |
|
A man accompanies him into a guardroom, where an officer is presiding over some registers. |
|
But when the six percussionists timidly clink their cymbals, it's hard to keep thinking they're high priests presiding over a purgative rite. |
|
A parole petition had to be agreed upon by the public defender, district attorney's office, and the presiding judge. |
|
The presiding judge has given both parties a year to settle their differences before a trial. |
|
He is the presiding genius of the national spirit, a kind of Churchill in a neck ruff. |
|
The image we see is of an aloof presidency, presiding over dysfunctional government agencies. |
|
Father Spellman, presiding, spoke to mourners of a great sadness in all our hearts today. |
|
The case will resume on October 7, exactly a year after the home run, with another judge presiding. |
|
At a dinner party given by the King at Balmoral in September 1936, Wallis was presiding as official hostess. |
|
The Farm Council will meet at Hotel Europe with Agriculture and Food Minister Joe Walsh presiding. |
|
A memorial Mass is scheduled this morning in St Peter's Square at 10.30 am with Sodano presiding. |
|
I spent nights lying in bed imagining I was presiding with Warren Burger or John Jay. |
|
It was always a course fraught with risk for him to do a media interview about a case over which he was still presiding. |
|
Certainly not a presiding consciousness, since it does not contemplatively possess these necessarily antagonistic, mutually relative worlds. |
|
His presiding inspirations are Vuillard and Bonnard, masters of the domestic interior, to which he adds a dash of Abstract Expressionist brio. |
|
|
They were also meant to be seen by others, so as to reflect well on the taste and fashionableness of the lady presiding over tea. |
|
The activist, whose daughter was a presiding officer for one polling station, has strenuously denied any impropriety. |
|
The presiding circuit judge might not have known all the laws relevant to the case. |
|
In some cases, the highly compensated corporate chieftains are presiding over companies that are slashing payrolls. |
|
Fifteen years on, and the honourable member is a chancellor presiding over dwindling dole queues and a booming economy. |
|
In this case, the presiding judge cut through the legal chaff and ruled that the request for information was reasonable. |
|
The presiding deity is taken out on a caparisoned elephant accompanied by other pachyderms in full paraphernalia. |
|
He took a hammering for presiding over persistently high levels of unemployment and for less than impressive rates of economic growth. |
|
She offered it as obeisance to the Lord Brihadeeswara, presiding deity of the temple. |
|
He was quite comfortable in presiding at the Lord's Supper in this vesture because it befit the ministry he had chosen. |
|
His butler bosses him, and he spends all day dictating boring letters to other bankers and presiding at soporific board meetings. |
|
That means the Conservatives risk presiding over a Brexit and the break-up of the United Kingdom within five years. |
|
While presiding over the wrestling bouts of the other village boys he would never allow me to take on anybody since he knew I wasn't as tough. |
|
In the US where there is trial by jury, the presiding judge can rule a mistrial, leading to the trial beginning anew. |
|
Tony Hargreaves, presiding, congratulated Simms on a glowing report by the probation service. |
|
The presiding judge also sentenced the girl to 100 lashes with a whip, despite her claim that she had been raped, he said. |
|
And there, on the front line, presiding over events in a tin hat and flak jacket, is the war correspondent. |
|
The presiding tick box culture allowed and even fostered suboptimal assessment. |
|
At Golden Star, Chef Hemji Maharaj, who is the presiding deity of the kitchen, manages to pack in quite a bit of food in one thali. |
|
The presiding officer at a polling station in whose ballot boxes strange things appeared at the recount, was a tall, imposing, black man. |
|
|
His family today confirmed they cannot pay the five million drachma bail money which has been set by the judges presiding over his case. |
|
The Spanish assault upon the Aztecs is a presiding symbol of Western brutality and colonialism. |
|
The presiding magistrate did not turn up to court, having had magisterial duties at the La Brea district. |
|
His bodily gestures at the altar in presiding at the Eucharist, especially in consecrating the bread and wine, were important. |
|
She's young, she's attractive and she's highly motivated, running two thriving businesses as well as presiding over weekly Rotarian gatherings. |
|
The Orthodox Church is headed by a patriarch, presiding over the Holy Synod, with a hierarchy of regional archbishops, bishops, and priests. |
|
In most ancient church buildings the apse was to the east, so the presiding minister stood between the altar and the people. |
|
A sign of things to come for McConnell was demonstrated by the widespread revolt against his nominee for deputy presiding officer. |
|
Seated in the center was the presiding jurywoman, an octogenarian from Argentina. |
|
Both men lost their cases and seem to have made hardly a dent in the opinions of either their respective presiding judges or public sentiment in general. |
|
During his appearance, Morsi angrily asked the presiding judge why he was on trial. |
|
It might cost you the Speakership, but presiding over a classically dysfunctional House with the rule might do the same thing. |
|
As the presiding officer, he recognises those members who wish to speak. |
|
In a lyrically crafted homily, he displayed his mastery of words to criticize the world's major nations for presiding over the destruction of the environment. |
|
The presiding deity of British pirate radio at the time was a fast-talking expat American who called himself, with standard transatlantic hyperbole, Emperor Rosko. |
|
Moore uses the example of a pastor presiding over an unbiblical heterosexual wedding. |
|
But six months into his probation, Bartiromo asked the judge presiding over his case for a reprieve. |
|
One woman had the brass neck to criticise his Government for presiding over a country where social services were being cut to the bone and the minimum wage never went up. |
|
However, when asked to give the verdict in public by the presiding judge, one voter recanted. |
|
He might as well have been presiding instead of the Judiciary Committee chairman, Vermont Democrat Patrick Leahy. |
|
|
The now-sainted Abraham Lincoln was subject to particularly vicious attacks while presiding over the Civil War. |
|
There are whole pages full of Masonic toasts from which the presiding officer could select, and after every one of which a bumper was drunk by the Brethren present. |
|
While the presiding bishop acts as the church's executive director, the church canons do not give him final spiritual authority over his fellow bishops. |
|
As chancellor, Dame Janet will be the official figurehead of the university, presiding over degree ceremonies and taking a leading role in other ceremonial events. |
|
You could even be advised by the presiding judge to try and sell your efforts to barristers-at-law in any future court appearances and ingratiate yourself with the judiciary. |
|
Though I saw plainly, by this address, that I had got in with a coquet, my presiding star was not a whit out of my good graces for involving me in this adventure. |
|
Prince Otto von Bismarck, chancellor of the German Empire, was presiding. |
|
This spiritual authority is often signified by the bodily gestures of the priest while he or she is consecrating the elements while presiding at the Eucharist. |
|
The audience, the organizers, the two presiding media, are all one to him. |
|
In Italy, the presiding judge of a court is addressed as Signor presidente della corte. |
|
Subpoenas are usually issued by the clerk of the court in the name of the judge presiding over the case. |
|
In spite of Mr. James' occasional weakness for sobbing notes, the presiding spirit of the establishment is, I should say, one of rompery. |
|
He is aglow, too, remembering Freud presiding over the Vienna Society. |
|
The Speaker of the House of Commons is the presiding officer of the House of Commons, the United Kingdom's lower chamber of Parliament. |
|
President Michel Martelly was presiding at a memorial ceremony at a mass grave north of Port-au-Prince. |
|
The role of president of the Security Council involves setting the agenda, presiding at its meetings and overseeing any crisis. |
|
The presiding light behind this creation was a woman named Natalia Murray. |
|
The Bailiff of Guernsey is the civil head, and presiding officer of the States of Guernsey, but not of Alderney or Sark. |
|
When you go to the jury room, the first thing you should do is choose a presiding juror to act as a foreperson during your deliberations. |
|
If a Deputy Speaker is presiding, then he or she holds the casting vote instead of the Speaker. |
|
|
Judge John Pickering had clearly gone around the bend, often presiding over his court while drunk. |
|
This is the principle presiding the Commission's proposal to revise the current EU FTL rules. |
|
In addition to his or her role as presiding officer, the Speaker performs several other functions on the behalf of the House of Commons. |
|
His successor John Bercow abandoned traditional dress, wearing a plain black gown over his lounge suit when presiding. |
|
In the case of a hung jury, the presiding judge makes the final decision. |
|
The signatures of the presiding officers of Congress are therefore not present in this version of the act. |
|
The earliest year for which a presiding officer has been identified is 1258, when Peter de Montfort presided over the Parliament held in Oxford. |
|
Services were held beginning in 1606, with Clyfton as pastor, John Robinson as teacher, and Brewster as the presiding elder. |
|
It was conducted from 28 January to 25 May 1521, with Emperor Charles V presiding. |
|
The current presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church is Michael Bruce Curry, the first African American bishop to serve in that position. |
|
The mitre, zuchetto, and stole are generally worn by bishops when presiding over liturgical functions. |
|
The prosecution argued that the jury had been misled by the presiding judge on four crucial points. |
|
There are several examples where presiding authorities are not bound by the rules of evidence. |
|
The Lord Chancellor used to be the presiding officer of the House of Lords by right of prescription. |
|
The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 removed this function, leaving the choice of a presiding officer to the House of Lords itself. |
|
All issues of fact are determined by the presiding Chancellor or Vice Chancellor. |
|
The chamber usually met only once a year, with the Viceroy presiding, but it appointed a Standing Committee which met more often. |
|
Until July 2006, the role of presiding officer in the House of Lords was undertaken by the Lord Chancellor. |
|
The Chairman of Ways and Means is the principal Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons, presiding over the House in the Speaker's absence. |
|
Although New Spain was a dependency of Spain, it was a kingdom not a colony, subject to the presiding monarch on the Iberian Peninsula. |
|
|
Once the division concludes, the tellers provide the results to the presiding officer, who then announces them to the House. |
|
The currently elected presiding officer is The Rt Wp The Mayor of St Davids Cllr John George. |
|
The presiding officer and chairperson of the council is The Rt Wp The Mayor Cllr Colin Hardie. |
|
Neither the Presiding or the deputy presiding officers are allowed to participate in Assembly votes. |
|
Greenspan was presiding over a broad expansion when he was reappointed. |
|
The presiding officer, if he or she believes that the result of the voice vote is clear, may reject the challenge. |
|
The Lord President of the Council is responsible for presiding over the meetings of the Privy Council. |
|
The political sequel to Separatism is the neutral state presiding over a multisectarian society. |
|
The Prime Minister became responsible for calling meetings, presiding, taking notes, and reporting to the Sovereign. |
|
Once the division concludes, the Tellers provide the results thereof to the presiding officer, who then announces them to the House. |
|
In the House of Lords, members need not seek the recognition of the presiding officer before speaking, as is done in the House of Commons. |
|
The presiding officer has little power compared to the Speaker of the House of Commons. |
|
He disclosed this while presiding over a meeting to review the constructional work of Nawaz Sharif Kidney Hospital here today. |
|
Traditionally, the presiding officer alternates between calling Members from the Government and Opposition. |
|
Whilst presiding over the House of Lords, the Lord Chancellor traditionally wore ceremonial black and gold robes. |
|
The Palace of Westminster also includes state apartments for the presiding officers of the two Houses. |
|
This finding confirms the general was stabbed right at the bottom of the Curia while presiding over a meeting of the Senate. |
|
The presiding officer may also wear a wig, but this tradition was abandoned by a former Speaker, Betty Boothroyd. |
|
He was presiding over a meeting here on Thursday which reviewed progress of Punjab Saaf Pani Project. |
|
The Lord Speaker may be replaced as presiding officer by one of his or her deputies. |
|
|
As the Speaker is expected to be an impartial presiding officer, Baroness Hayman resigned from the Labour Party. |
|
In addition to the administrative or executive duties in organizations, the chairman has the duties of presiding over meetings. |
|
At the beginning of each new parliamentary term, the House of Commons elects one of its members as a presiding officer, known as the Speaker. |
|
He took heart at this and attempted to recommence government, even presiding over a meeting of the Privy Council. |
|
Darnley quickly became unpopular in Scotland and then infamous for presiding over the murder of Mary's Italian secretary David Rizzio. |
|
Proceedings were regulated by the presiding officer in either chamber. |
|
By convention the Speaker severs all ties with his or her political party, as it is considered essential that the Speaker be seen as an impartial presiding officer. |
|
Bishops are typically overseers, presiding over a diocese composed of many parishes, with an archbishop presiding over a province, which is a group of dioceses. |
|
Early presiding officers were known by the title parlour or prolocutor. |
|
Matilda proved an effective queen for Henry, acting as a regent in England on occasion, addressing and presiding over councils, and extensively supporting the arts. |
|
Wolsey went so far as to convene an ecclesiastical court in England with a representative of the Pope presiding, and Henry and Catherine herself in attendance. |
|
The presiding officer of the assembly does not appoint a chairman of the quasi committee, but remains in the chair himself throughout its proceedings. |
|
The presiding officer is chosen by the Speaker of the House and is normally a member of the majority party who does not hold the chair of a standing committee. |
|
The Assembly's presiding officer is Welsh Labour member Rosemary Butler. |
|
Whilst presiding, the Speaker or Deputy Speaker wears ceremonial dress. |
|
On election, the Lord Speaker resigns the party whip or crossbench group and certain outside interests to concentrate on being an impartial presiding officer. |
|
While presiding, the chairman should remain impartial and not interrupt a speaker if the speaker has the floor and is following the rules of the group. |
|
The Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church, the presiding bishop of the Scottish Episcopal Church, is elected by the episcopal synod from among its members. |
|
When presiding over debates, the Lord Speaker sits on the Woolsack. |
|
Deputies have the same powers as the Speaker when presiding. |
|
|
Then, the presiding officer makes a formal, but simple statement to the house, acquainting each house that royal assent has been granted to the acts mentioned. |
|
At 7am when the poll opens, the presiding officer must show the empty ballot box to those who are present inside the polling station, before closing and sealing it. |
|
Court Administrator Earl Bradley said last month that presiding judges are facing a period of significant transformation in the state's trial courts. |
|
The presiding officer then announces the result of the voice vote, but if his assessment is challenged by any Lord, a recorded vote known as a division follows. |
|
Whilst presiding, the Speaker sits in a chair at the front of the House. |
|
A suffragan bishop was consecrated for the Anglican Episcopal Church in late 2008 by its presiding bishop and three bishops of the Diocese of the Great Lakes. |
|
Notoriously, Barry Fry spent nine years from 1996 to 2005 as chairmanager of Peterborough United, presiding over one promotion and two relegations. |
|
Other terms sometimes used for the office and its holder include chair, chairperson, chairwoman, presiding officer, president, moderator, facilitator, and convenor. |
|
Special poojas were performed to presiding deities at the Manakula Vinayakar and Sithananda Swamigal temples, to seek the blessings of the Almighty for the leader's long life. |
|
They were published under an editorial board consisting of the Chief Justices of the Territories and the presiding judge of the Court of Appeal for Eastern Africa. |
|