So, what we have here is a situation where what we normally think of as legal procedures simply are inapplicable. |
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Thus this Court must uphold the Probate Court's decision to find laches inapplicable to this action. |
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The concept of expungement for its own sake is simply inapplicable to a law on this subject matter. |
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What's striking about this proposal is how utterly inapplicable those arguments are here. |
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They are inapplicable to orders made by a court of unlimited jurisdiction in the course of contentious litigation. |
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Where fully automatic techniques are inapplicable, semi-automatic equipment can combine the advantages of manual and automatic welding. |
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The idea that term limits are necessary to unseat jaded officials and rouse lazy voters could not be more inapplicable in New York City now. |
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It is obviously inapplicable to substances whose virtues depend in any considerable degree upon readily volatilizable constituents. |
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A modified version of this argument seems to me much sounder in general, but inapplicable to the present case. |
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Take from it what you will, and ignore what you find inapplicable to your own life. I hope you find it as beautiful as I do. |
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If these writers possessed some illumination in their own fields-English or Media Studies, say, or Semiotics-the term would be inapplicable. |
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There is no evidence of such a payment so the general rule is inapplicable. |
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Estimates based on proximal limb-bone circumference data are more accurate but are inapplicable where postcranial remains are unknown. |
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My research showed that the questionnaire concerned was basically inapplicable to general population groups. |
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With a late tax return showing a tax underpayment, the mailbox rule is inapplicable. |
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In these days, Parliament has passed one law, which it amended twice because it turned out that it is inapplicable in reality. |
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If the couple are mere cohabitants, the MWPA 1964 is inapplicable and on the face of it the common law rules will apply. |
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We need to target resources towards generating relevant evidence rather than recycling inadequate or inapplicable evidence. |
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Are such pronouncements context-specific in a way that renders them inapplicable today? |
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As for the business management hypothesis, this concept is entirely inapplicable to the present case. |
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As far as racial bigotry is concerned, the term is wholly inapplicable to the election coverage at issue here. |
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They argued that, if the merger project was not divisible into a domestic and a foreign part, prohibitory power was inapplicable. |
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This is a classic case where the principle of subsidiarity is substantially inapplicable. |
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The lessons of a sleepy Dutch spirits market were inapplicable in, say, the cut-throat world of frozen yogurt. |
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The laboratory experiments of physics and chemistry, or even psychology, seem inapplicable to market behaviour. |
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In addition, some statutes that regulate the affairs of non-parliamentarians have been held to be inapplicable within Parliament. |
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The Supreme Court of Canada was not saving that the usual rules of statutory interpretation were inapplicable in respect to such Legislation. |
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However, some provisions may be inapplicable to certain species because of the biological characteristics of that species. |
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A rating plan and bench-mark position descriptions are inapplicable in this case. |
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Unlike acceptance, an objection makes the reservation inapplicable as against the author of the objection. |
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Accordingly, any legal provision running counter to those rules would be inapplicable. |
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That fact makes certain legal rules formally inapplicable, and the novelty of the situation creates a dilemma for both the government and for immigrants. |
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In the case of cashcards, which involve bipartite agreements, and of electronic purses which are treated like cash, the last problem is inapplicable. |
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It also explores several conceptions of objectivity that are each either inapplicable to law or subsumable under at least one of the six conceptions just mentioned. |
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But while these are promising examples of an approach that pursues truth above all else, they are inapplicable to the United States for two reasons. |
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From the beginning of my promotion efforts it was evident that the consumer education model as applied to colleagues is inapplicable for our academic setting. |
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In sum, a careful analysis of the Levitt and Venkatesh study suggests that present orientation is at best an incomplete and often inapplicable theory of crime. |
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The current Apiculture Act, adopted in 1983, was completely inapplicable to new social conditions, the authors wrote in their reasoning for the bill. |
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Your correspondent ventures that Britain, though politically distinctive, is not so different from these countries as to render such examples entirely inapplicable. |
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Consequently, some educationists have argued that costbenefit analysis is inapplicable to education due to the multiplicity of educational objectives and the importance of non-economic benefits. |
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The adoption of a new act should result in the express repeal of any act or provision rendered inapplicable or redundant by virtue of the new act. |
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Casualty replacement schemes had been based on statistics derived from the Italian campaign which proved inapplicable to the nature of the fighting in Normandy. |
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If one or more provisions of these General Terms and Conditions should prove to be illegal or inapplicable for whatever reason, the validity and application of the other provisions will not in any case be affected by it. |
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Several associations argue that the legislation is out of step with the realities of local health care and justice, and is therefore often inapplicable. |
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Still it appears very academic and almost inapplicable in its strict meaning, risking to deprive some patients of potentially efficient treatments. |
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Jennifer Jenkins, the director of Duke University's Centre for the Study of the Public Domain, says trademark protection would be inapplicable, in any case. |
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In describing such abbreviations, the term initialism is inapplicable. |
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Yet within philosophy, this stance of cultural relativism is undermined and made inapplicable since such value judgement is itself a product of a given culture. |
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