Clearly, that is right, but it does not seem to me to be dispositive of the claim. |
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Sure price is a big factor, but it is not the only one, and often not the dispositive one. |
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But this argument cannot be dispositive because Baker itself involved a claim that a state had abused the power of drawing district lines. |
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And the Divine Right of Kings is generally not considered to be a uniquely dispositive reason for the monarchial system. |
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That does not seem a terribly precise point of law dispositive of anything, does it? |
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The Commission makes no effort to explain why the lack of an indictment was dispositive outside of a law enforcement context. |
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The administration argues strenuously that the arbitrator's award is dispositive of Mr. Yousry's legal status. |
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The Divisional Court found that section 15 of the Building Code Act was intended to be dispositive of the issue of standing. |
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The criterion for the category of dispositive treaties is evidently an elusive one. |
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Because adjudication is dispositive the attitude of states towards compulsory jurisdiction is conspicuously ambivalent. |
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How the authority perceived the terms of that document cannot be dispositive, or even relevant, if its perception involved an error of law. |
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They fall short of providing clear guidance dispositive of the myriad factual situations that arise. |
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Such similar results are interesting, I suppose, but hardly theologically dispositive. |
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Often, the notes achieve a dispositive characteristic for the fact finder where facts are in dispute. |
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Like the trial court, we, too, find the case of California Medical, supra, 79 Cal.App.4th 542 applicable and dispositive to the issue raised on appeal. |
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The analysis inherent in this test focuses upon a number of relevant factors, none of which alone are dispositive. |
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In such case, with due observance of particular law, the dispositive part of the sentence may be communicated to the same party. |
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For example, the parties might agree that discovery be limited, that a few representative claims be tried, and that certain dispositive issues be tried first. |
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One of my clients, for example, was concerned about the dispositive provisions of an irrevocable life insurance trust he established 10 years ago. |
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This Panel finds that this distinction is not dispositive and the Swine IV Panel's decision is intrinsically persuasive. |
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These specific provisions have meant that the practical importance of the dispositive powers has very much declined. |
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The legal categorisation of the claim cannot be dispositive in itself. |
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Whether there was a prior inconsistent agreement is in my view clearly a genuine issue of material fact requiring trial and is dispositive of the summary judgment motion. |
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For them, the original understanding is either always dispositive, or creates a strong presumption that can only be overcome by very powerful arguments. |
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All I can say is that it sounds plausible to me, but that others are much better placed to render a dispositive judgment. |
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The lanthanides samarium, europium and ytterbium possess relatively stable and long-known dispositive states. |
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All three of these documents barely meet the test of relevance, and certainly do not meet the high threshold requirement that they be practically dispositive of the point at issue. |
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Now LED UFO offers you a dispositive that can be used quicly to know if the harvest moment is became, looking the maturation state of avancement analysing the trichomes. |
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It seems that the only thing that would have counted as dispositive evidence of Cassandra's maturity, of her capacity to withhold consent, was a willingness to grant it. |
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The use of race must be minimal enough that it does not serve a dispositive role in the admissions calculus, but it must be powerful enough that it achieves its aims of ushering greater diversity into the student body. |
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This is hardly dispositive evidence that Mr Perry is lying. |
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Mr Carney then offered a rejoinder, which I consider dispositive. |
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Its rank-ordering of senses is certainly not intended to be legally dispositive, so that the first sense listed can be used by judges across the ocean to enforce contracts or put people in prison. |
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But this cannot be dispositive justification for the destruction of hundreds of civilian houses in South Lebanon, nor other distant houses or infrastructure. |
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The Committee further considered that the judgement of the Supreme Court of South Australia in Alvaro's case was not necessarily dispositive of the author's own case. |
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Accordingly, this 'new evidence' does not meet the threshold requirement for review: the requirement that it be practically dispositive of the matter in favour of the Applicants' position. |
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Proceeding further along the spectrum, the dispositive provisions of federal legislation may refer to, but leave undefined, principles and terminology that ordinarily fall within property and civil rights. |
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While this is dispositive of the issue whether the '264 Patent pertains to Virazole, it is appropriate to respond to the other submissions of the Respondents concerning the '264 Patent. |
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The assessors' reckoning of a man's holdings and their values, as recorded in Domesday Book, was dispositive and without appeal. |
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We were unable to produce any dispositive evidence to support our case. |
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The dispositive event was when Franklin Roosevelt, upon taking office in 1933, took the dollar off the gold standard and once that happened, prices started to rise. |
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These considerations now were dispositive of' any claims of negligence in the medical decisions concerning the treatment the patient needed and received. |
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