The current government, as well as regulators, have been trying to find a way out of their contractual obligations. |
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Too many franchisors are able to abuse their market power and contractual obligations without any effective sanction under the current law. |
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The dispute was not validly referred for adjudication under the contractual provisions. |
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The fact that the employee is dismissed while in receipt of his contractual sick pay does not make the termination automatically unfair. |
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I think that's a common way of looking at relationships because marriage is a form of contractual ownership. |
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Such a duty did not depend on a contractual relationship between the person causing and the person suffering the damage. |
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It is a contractual mechanism for resolving any dispute that cannot be amicably resolved. |
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One of the contractual purposes is to prevent the avoidance of the statutory restrictions. |
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This is a particularly live issue in changes of job duties, the contractual scope of which is vital to decisions on redundancy payments. |
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No contractual arrangements or personal agreements between same-sex or de facto couples can override the legislation. |
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His failure to create a contractual arrangement with his passengers means that he is constantly taken advantage of. |
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These Centres will work with communities under terms and conditions based on articulated contractual arrangements and expectations. |
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Her certificate of discharge even recorded the longitude and latitude at which the company's contractual obligations ended. |
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The doctor backed out of his contractual responsibility to provide out of hours care for his patients. |
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These builders had a contractual duty to build this wall so as to act as a firebreak. |
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Governors and headteachers will soon have a contractual duty of care to the work-life balance of teachers. |
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But the college can't just short-circuit the contractual fair-hearing process. |
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Until now, bioprospecting has proceeded largely by private contractual arrangement. |
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But medical decisions are not black-and-white and cannot be reduced to a set of contractual contingencies. |
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The judgment of the court, delivered by Scott LJ, was to the effect that the contractual right was unaffected. |
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The court reasoned that using the userid and password in violation of a contractual provision was an unauthorized access. |
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The appeal raises a question of contractual construction on undisputed facts. |
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At this point, the intensifier is not longer a free agent, but has become a sort of contractual associate of the negation. |
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This negotiation can entail a new contractual term with or without further contributions. |
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They're certainly breaking their contractual agreement with the bank by participating in these rebate schemes. |
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This means that funds have to be obligated against contractual agreements within a limited amount of time. |
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This connotes a voluntary invitation by the offeror to the offeree to enter into a contractual relationship. |
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We consider a lease to be a private contractual agreement between two parties. |
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Half of the contractual price was payable upon signing the sale contract, with the remainder due within the ensuing 20 days. |
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The loss or diminution of salary and other contractual perquisites are claimed as special damages. |
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A plaintiff has no contractual right to recover loss from third parties and so might require the indemnifier to make good any such loss. |
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The contractual remedy provided for in the trust indenture did not preclude alternative relief being granted under the oppression remedy. |
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There was just one question about current contractual commitments, which we think could be resolved. |
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It may prove ineffective if, at appeal, workers expose vague contractual obligations. |
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In this context, the attitude engendered by a contractual mentality is one of minimal compliance rather than maximal cooperation. |
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This doctrine lives on today as one of many maxims for contractual interpretation. |
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But as the speech of Lord Goff demonstrates, that contractual obligation is of little utility. |
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A person who enters into a binding contract acquires contractual rights that are created by the contract. |
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A sharp rise in contractual obligations could, de facto, wipe out his precarious autonomy. |
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He did not think it could change and saw it as a binding contractual commitment. |
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The frequency of renegotiation is troubling because the contractual changes often are not desirable. |
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The general approach to construction of contractual documents is not in doubt. |
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These are serious breaches of contractual obligations, the company maintains. |
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It has also imposed contractual terms that do not permit either bidder to reveal those bids. |
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We agreed to co-operate with and assist you to comply with your contractual obligations with regard to the defect. |
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Desmond's remedy would be the recovery of the rifle, not the right to enforce contractual payment. |
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The duties owed by the pastor to the church are not contractual or enforceable. |
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It was more economically rational to employ forces as and when required on a contractual basis. |
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That contract imposes a similar, contractual duty to exercise reasonable skill and care in relation to the design. |
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These contractual agreements create a delivery right and an obligation for members. |
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We would be obliged if you would revise your Minutes to reflect this contractual requirement. |
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The injunction we seek is not one that in any way interferes with existing contractual rights or obligations. |
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He did what he had to do, and that was to redesign the viaduct such that it could be built and would comply with the contractual requirements. |
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And in that respect, all the churches can do is to impose contractual sanctions. |
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The term also refers to contractual stipulations either implied by law or expressly mandated by the contracting parties. |
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The question of any contractual character the crown might possess was skirted. |
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The contractual nature of employment today has heightened the levels of exploitation. |
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Thereafter there has been no issue that these courts are the proper and only forum for the resolution of all the contractual claims. |
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Once she was freed from the contractual bondage in December 2001, there was no stopping this beauty. |
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It was a free-standing independent body whose jurisdiction was dependant on the contractual consent of its members. |
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Here, B was under a pre-existing contractual duty owed to A's employer to test the truthfulness of A's statements. |
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The arguments for demanding formalities or other prerequisites to create contractual relations where none existed before are strong. |
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If the relationship was solely a contractual principal and agent relationship, was it governed by the terms of the 1995 agency agreement? |
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Not all statements are contractual in nature as some may be mere representations or commendatory puffs which, if true, lack any legal value. |
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These licences are essentially gratuitous, since if any charge was made for them, they would be regarded as contractual. |
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What at first seems to be nothing more than a contractual obligation thing is actually an embarrassment of riches. |
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When the ship was ready to discharge the contractual cargo, there was no notification to the charterers or their agents. |
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The wife is trying to make an end run around a contractual agreement, and she isn't a party to it. |
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Any tenant has a contractual right to quiet possession and enjoyment of the letting. |
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Where an author has not entered into a contractual agreement to disclose a work, his or her right to control divulgation is absolute. |
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They were not but, your Honour, what was happening was that they were erecting a contractual system and qualifying it. |
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Currently, no government department has responsibility for the regulation of service charges or property management as these agreements are considered contractual. |
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I do not accept that it is appropriate to release detailed, market-sensitive information about the financial and contractual aspects of the scheme at this stage. |
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It will be seen that s.10 is solely concerned with tort, section 11 deals in a somewhat curious way with a mixture of tortious and contractual liability. |
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First, there may be exceptional circumstances where it is deemed in the public interest for the government to fail to honour its contractual obligations. |
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Another change concerns a provision stipulating that failure to meet contractual obligations for two consecutive years will result in termination of the contracts. |
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In the Middle Ages, marriage had often been a contractual, even commercial business, in which the bride was handed over like a chattel from father to husband. |
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As a result they contrived and fabricated a way to remove me from the company which they believed would relieve them of this contractual commitment. |
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They should state clearly and concisely, without a sneery pout, that it's just another contractual obligation, among many, that must be fulfilled. |
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The procurer must be able to be shown to have acted with knowledge of the contract, and with the intention to interfere with the claimant's contractual rights. |
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The aim of the inquiry is not to probe the real intentions of the parties, but to ascertain the contextual meaning of the relevant contractual language. |
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Finally, the above classifications relate to promissory conditions but there may also be contingent conditions which either suspend or cancel contractual liability. |
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In the West, contractual obligations are seldom dishonoured. |
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Unfortunately it was dropped only at the last minute with the result that the witness statements contain inadmissible evidence of details of the contractual negotiations. |
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It is the practice of the defendant in relation to its contractual and statutory requirements that forms the gravamen of the plaintiffs' complaint. |
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Any additional contractual and legal issues that arise in the partnership scenario will depend very much on the degree of amicability involved in what is essentially a split. |
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Part of the new arrangements will see people being paid minimum contractual hours when absent from work and not the average hours they currently receive. |
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The judge ruled that the doctor's actions were in breach of her contractual duty. |
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Due to a press blackout imposed by both sides in the dispute, no details have been released as to what contractual disagreements caused the breakdown in the negotiations. |
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It is easy to make too much of the contractual nature of the relationship. |
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Through contractual agreements or other comparable means, we shall ensure that your personal information is protected when processed by our mandataries and external agencies. |
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But this approach should not arise from the fact that it is our contractual duty under the law and we want to keep our jobs. |
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The specific financial and contractual terms of the Yale-NUS agreement have not been made public. |
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After a further period of at least a year, the person can be temporarily incorporated into the prelature through a formal contractual declaration, which is renewable annually. |
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The transfer of Scarborough striker Chris Tate to York City's Division Three rivals Leyton Orient finally went through after a contractual hitch was overcome. |
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It is right to acknowledge, however, that the contractual position as between the parties may also negative the imposition of a duty of care in tort. |
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He said they had failed to honour their contractual obligations. |
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A client may well wish to discuss advice received with a partner, or with another adviser, or with a contractual counterparty who might be affected. |
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This would seem to be reasonable, so long as flexibility is construable as a contractual obligation but not if it goes beyond the scope of the contract. |
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The employee would be relying upon certain implied contractual terms such as that of trust and confidence and the duty to provide a safe working environment. |
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Accordingly the lease will continue until its contractual expiry date. |
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However, the family considered their contractual obligations binding. |
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In most jurisdictions, this requires a contractual trust agreement or deed. |
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The Service has issued an industry director directive on contractual allowance issues in the health care industry. |
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It needs to think again and abandon plans to force through unfair, unworkable contractual changes. |
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Cyberdefamation, virus production, or negligent publication cases will rarely arise out of contractual relations. |
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A discussion of the deity's capacity to enter into a contractual agreement will, of course, not ensue due to its obvious farceness. |
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Crucially, the English common law was sufficiently flexible to adapt its archaic contractual rules into new formats suited to modern commerce. |
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The EADS group does not communicate about these mergers, excepted when required by the law, such as in contractual documents. |
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Waters wrote to EMI and Columbia announcing he had left the band, and asked them to release him from his contractual obligations. |
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Gielgud had an enforceable contractual claim to the role, but Dean, a notorious bully, was a powerful force in British theatre. |
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Some of these tournaments can also be watched on the internet for free using a live stream, depending on contractual restrictions. |
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On 4 April they voted to remove James VII from office, drawing on George Buchanan's argument on the contractual nature of monarchy. |
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Barbirolli returned to New York to complete his contractual obligations to the Philharmonic. |
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Property rights are well protected and contractual agreements are strictly honoured. |
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They are mostly centred around kinship and contractual relations, although we have some ideas about criminal law and legal procedure as well. |
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The regulation of contractual relationships therefore most likely formed the single most essential element of all early Celtic laws. |
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Cowell offered to waive Boyle's contractual obligation to take part in the BGT tour. |
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At that time, it was a contractual obligation that the series could only adapt stories that appeared in print. |
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It emphasised contractual freedom and alienability of property, while shunning legal technicalities and deciding cases ex aequo et bono. |
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Not all agreements are necessarily contractual, as the parties generally must be deemed to have an intention to be legally bound. |
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Each term gives rise to a contractual obligation, breach of which can give rise to litigation. |
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An express term is stated by the parties during negotiation or written in a contractual document. |
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Punitive damages are relatively uncommon in contractual cases versus tort cases. |
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However, compensation for defective but not unsafe products is typically available only through contractual actions through the law of warranty. |
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By contrast, contractual rights are rights enforceable against particular persons. |
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Enforcement of contractual rights is necessary for economic development because it determines the rate and direction of investments. |
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Many millwrights choose to enter the private sector to work on a contractual basis. |
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Some challenges of job security are temporary contracts and contractual employment. |
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I was not under any contractual compulsion to take any of the comments. |
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Finally, it shows that the same reasoning supports rescissory remedies for contractual mistake, frustration, or impossibility. |
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The well was drilled with the Deepsea Delta semisub provided on a contractual basis by Norsk Hydro of Norway. |
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The well is being drilled with the Deepsea Delta semisub provided on a contractual basis by Norsk Hydro of Norway. |
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An independent contractor should not be dismissed unless the worker fails to meet contractual obligations. |
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If the contractual sick pay is more than the SSP, the employee will receive the contractual sick pay and SSP will make up part of it. |
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The widely-accepted modern definition of contractual duress comes from Lord Scarman in the 1983 British case of Universe Tankships Inc. |
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The remedy of specific performance is, in contractual matters, an order by the court which requires the party in breach of contract to perform his obligations. |
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It also receives contractual payments from clean energy utilities and financiers of renewable energy solutions, when its members sign up as clients. |
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It added that this power would be exercised sparingly, bearing in mind the danger of retrospectively disturbing contractual, proprietary and other legal rights. |
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It is a contractual obligation for the ITV company to broadcast schools programming, and this was initially broadcast as part of the normal scheduling. |
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Statutes or judicial rulings may create implied contractual terms, particularly in standardized relationships such as employment or shipping contracts. |
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Not all language in the contract is determined to be a contractual term. |
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But the court of appeal held that it would appear to a reasonable man that Carbolic had made a serious offer, and determined that the reward was a contractual promise. |
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On this basis we condemn the action of Natfhe members and support the university's decision to withhold pay until contractual duties have been fulfilled. |
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This differs from polyandry and polygyny, which are contractual. |
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Under the TEF agreement, Countrywide reports its job gains and other pertinent information to the state at the end of each year for comparison to the contractual targets. |
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Judges who derive their authority from a contractual agreement of the parties to a dispute, rather than a governmental body are called arbitrators. |
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Reconversion of the equity resource notes to normal debt would occur if the market price of the bank stock later rose above the contractual threshold. |
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In the event of encashment of performance guarantee contractual obligations will have to be realized provider guarantee adequate substitute a new one. |
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You'll need to use this technique almost every time you see parenthesized romanettes or letters in the middle of a contractual or legislative paragraph. |
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This contractual approach reaccentuated the element of consent in monogamy, which had always been central to its prominence as a public institution. |
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Property, contractual, business entities structure, much of civil procedure, and family law are still strongly influenced by traditional Roman legal thinking. |
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