In some jurisdictions, the writ has to be served or the process has to be served before the action is brought. |
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In some jurisdictions, a branch of the court of first instance undertakes the appellate function. |
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It is commercial to take into account the possible incidence of double taxation in jurisdictions outside Australia. |
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Many jurisdictions will look through the trust and tax the settlor or beneficiaries directly. |
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It was pointed out that all other common law jurisdictions hear such cases in jury courts. |
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As a result the common law courts still remain more distant from the merits than the administrative law courts of continental jurisdictions. |
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Domicile is mostly an Anglo-American concept although the definition differs slightly between the two jurisdictions. |
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Because 14,000 jurisdictions produce them with no national standard, forging birth certificates used to be easy. |
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The provision limiting comment accords with the present law in those jurisdictions where judicial comment may be made. |
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The single greatest impediment to creative, revolutionary sustainment progress appears to be entrenched parochial jurisdictions. |
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After the cars are stolen they are passed on to another criminal, who exports them out of the country to other right-hand-drive jurisdictions. |
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The British Army was methodically cratering roads in border areas to limit traffic between the two jurisdictions. |
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Whether all the appurtenant rights are assignable varies, however, among jurisdictions. |
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As in most American taxing jurisdictions, the assessor first appraises the separate market value of land and buildings for each taxable parcel. |
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America has a long history of vote tampering and rigged elections in many local jurisdictions. |
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Remember that ramps require a building permit, and the construction specifications can vary widely between jurisdictions. |
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All Australian jurisdictions have comprehensive schemes to strip criminals of all forms of ill-gotten gain. |
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In jurisdictions where a cheque can be backed by a guarantee card, there cannot be countermand. |
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In some jurisdictions, the judiciary are provided with the resources to run the courts. |
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In fact from an investment banking perspective it was a steal, and questionably legal in some jurisdictions due to the marketing of it. |
|
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I know some jurisdictions don't even allow you to sell your tickets at or below face value. |
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It is no longer viable to reinvent the wheel, create stovepipes or work apart from other agencies and jurisdictions. |
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Changes in tax rates shift the Laffer curves of competing tax jurisdictions. |
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Evidence from those American jurisdictions that have experimented with a negative income tax suggest that it has led to great P-A problems. |
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If Helena's experience wasn't a fluke, something similar should have happened in other jurisdictions with smoking bans. |
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In various jurisdictions the law has grappled with these contending policy considerations using a variety of legal tools. |
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Naturally, the different systems and jurisdictions for registering trademarks and domain names have given rise to immense difficulties. |
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And those jurisdictions have also eliminated discrimination in the areas of property division, wills, stamp duty and hospital visitation rights. |
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The right to life has been a fruitful source of environmental jurisprudence in several national jurisdictions, especially India. |
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There is no legislation of South Australia which says that courts of other jurisdictions may not sit in South Australia. |
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While referring to the laws of other jurisdictions, US courts have given them short shrift. |
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The superintendent also has plans to coordinate with the police to cover areas that might be considered between jurisdictions. |
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That case has been applied by practically every court in the highest point of the hierarchy in common law jurisdictions in the world. |
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Twelve statutory jurisdictions that have addressed this issue treat the right of publicity as descendible. |
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And with more than 11,000 electoral jurisdictions designing their own ballots and voting systems, all of our votes are in danger. |
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In other jurisdictions the mandatory appointment of a corporate trustee, or its equivalent, is set out in the law. |
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In the Highlands, however, the system of heritable jurisdictions was intertwined with a distinctive set of social arrangements. |
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There is thus an argument for saying that criminal record should be routinely admitted as in continental jurisdictions. |
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A number of jurisdictions allow for recovery of the cost of child rearing as an element of damages. |
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This is a topic on which the law has never been the same in the common law jurisdictions. |
|
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All these forms of avouchment will be more fully explained later in this guide, as they apply to the jurisdictions wherein they are used. |
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This one-size-fits-all approach would not allow local jurisdictions to decide how much access is appropriate at each road end. |
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Some jurisdictions do not have an actual estate or inheritance tax but still levy tax when a death occurs. |
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Do not the Netherlands and Switzerland have a more stringent test than common law jurisdictions? |
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Thus any later law was recognised in both common law and civil law jurisdictions. |
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We have started that process but it's early days and we need to look at what is happening in other jurisdictions in Australia. |
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Incarceration is a well-publicized feature of the American system, and is available too in other jurisdictions. |
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In a few coronial jurisdictions, however, even the pathologist is not authorised to retain a copy of the report. |
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Instead, they were answerable to a complex of hereditary or franchise jurisdictions in the hands of the feudal nobility. |
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The rule as it has developed in common law jurisdictions is in fact an exception to an exception to a rule of evidence. |
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Bear in mind, most jurisdictions prohibit the carrying of double-edged knives, and many do not allow concealed carry of fixed-blade knives. |
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There are only a narrow number of countries under the Convention that have specialist Family Law jurisdictions. |
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General Eric Holder announced that the DOJ will recognize same-sex marriages in all jurisdictions. |
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At the lowest level were thousands of petty jurisdictions, many private, but all fully staffed by a complement of judges, clerks, procurators, ushers, and tipstaffs. |
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It is the only sportsbook licensed in not two first world jurisdictions. |
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They are hiding it from the taxmen in their home jurisdictions. |
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State and local jurisdictions are more vulnerable to tax competition than the national government, and state and local taxes are more regressive than federal taxes. |
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The judicial system resembles that of other common law jurisdictions. |
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Indeed, it used to be a principle of asset management that portfolios were diversified across different national jurisdictions as part of a prudential spreading of risk. |
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In some jurisdictions, the fire department will evaluate new or existing emergency action plans and may be willing to observe the plan in action during a fire drill. |
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Justin gazed out from the dim interior as more than 300 police motorcycles from dozens of jurisdictions rumbled past. |
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In contrast, other jurisdictions only fine students for truancy, not the parents. |
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The town's acquisition of jurisdictions from its lords would have been a sufficient motivation to compile a written set of customary usages of the town. |
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The same applies to the courts and jurisdictions of the Cayman Islands. |
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But the international dimension of the internet has helped to safeguard freedom, because a decentralised medium evades the rule of law in specific jurisdictions. |
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There are many jurisdictions claiming authority over the same highways. |
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My younger, straighter-than-an-arrow son was stopped and arrested in two separate jurisdictions a few years ago. |
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There was no reference to other courts in other jurisdictions. |
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In some United States jurisdictions it's accepted into evidence, but it can be cross examined, and it basically has no privileged evidence status. |
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Confessional Mennonitism preserved a form of religious nonconformity in jurisdictions such as the Calvinist-ruled Netherlands and in Lutheran-ruled Hamburg and Altona. |
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The current settlement devolves substantial power and funding to the Scottish parliament and compares well with most other sub-national jurisdictions of the world. |
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In some jurisdictions this is a mandatory sentence of death. |
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Wind energy in many jurisdictions receives financial or other support to encourage its development. |
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During the 1900s many countries standardised within their jurisdictions, and changed from LHT to RHT, mostly to conform with regional custom. |
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Although many LHT jurisdictions are on islands, there are cases where vehicles may be driven from LHT across a border into a RHT area. |
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In RHT jurisdictions, vehicles are configured with LHD, with the driver sitting on the left side. |
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The use of ivies as ornamental plants in horticulture in California and other states is now discouraged or banned in certain jurisdictions. |
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The federal Cabinet also appoints justices to superior courts in the provincial and territorial jurisdictions. |
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Many jurisdictions refer to income tax on business entities as companies tax or corporate tax. |
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Most jurisdictions exempt locally organized charitable organizations from tax. |
|
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Some jurisdictions impose the higher of an income tax or a tax on an alternative base or measure of income. |
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Many jurisdictions allow notional deductions for individuals, and may allow deduction of some personal expenses. |
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Nonresidents are taxed only on certain types of income from sources within the jurisdictions, with few exceptions. |
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Few jurisdictions tax nonresidents other than on specific types of income earned within the jurisdiction. |
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Nearly all systems permit residents a credit for income taxes paid to other jurisdictions of the same sort. |
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Nearly all jurisdictions require those paying employees or nonresidents to withhold income tax from such payments. |
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Some jurisdictions also impose a tax collected from employers, to fund unemployment insurance, health care, or similar government outlays. |
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In some jurisdictions, in the Canadian province of Manitoba, for example, catch and release is mandatory for some species such as brook trout. |
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He chose to impose a joint rule over distinct jurisdictions on the true heirs. |
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In jurisdictions where the ages are not the same, the marriageable age for girls is more commonly two or three years lower than that for boys. |
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This judgement also laid down the principle that slavery contracted in other jurisdictions could not be enforced in England. |
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However, there are many recreational drugs that are legal in many jurisdictions and widely culturally accepted. |
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This treaty covered taxes, residence, tax jurisdictions, capital gains, business profits, interest, dividends, royalties and other areas. |
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The Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe and the Navajoland Area Mission are jurisdictions similar to a diocese. |
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In many jurisdictions, conciliar resolutions that have been passed require episcopal assent or consent to take force. |
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Creation of new autonomous and autocephalous jurisdictions was also marked by tendencies of internal centralization. |
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In 2007, various jurisdictions made attempts at overcoming the movement's divisions. |
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The powers, functions, method of appointment, discipline, and training of judges vary widely across different jurisdictions. |
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Thus, in many jurisdictions judges may be appointed for life, so that they cannot be removed by the executive. |
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In some jurisdictions, the terms mens rea and actus reus have been replaced by alternative terminology. |
|
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The levels of mens rea and the distinction between them vary between jurisdictions. |
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Hamilton, who was then the Chief Justice of the Protectorate and the reports covered all courts of different jurisdictions. |
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Contemptuous damages are a form of damage award available in some jurisdictions. |
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Some jurisdictions recognize a form of damages, called, aggravated damages, that are similar to punitive or exemplary damages. |
|
In most jurisdictions, this requires a contractual trust agreement or deed. |
|
In some jurisdictions certain types of assets may not be the subject of a trust without a written document. |
|
Circuit court is the name of court systems in several common law jurisdictions. |
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Most jurisdictions, like the United States and France, have a codified constitution, with a bill of rights. |
|
The common law and the civil law jurisdictions do not share the same constitutional law underpinnings. |
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Contract is a branch of the law of obligations in jurisdictions of the civil law tradition. |
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This is known as the peppercorn rule, but in some jurisdictions, the penny may constitute legally insufficient nominal consideration. |
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Neither is available as of right and in most jurisdictions and most circumstances a court will not normally order specific performance. |
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In most jurisdictions, the sale of real property is enforceable by specific performance. |
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In common law jurisdictions such as England and the United States, a high degree of freedom is the norm. |
|
Both of them exercise state government authority, localized to meet the particular needs of their jurisdictions, as provided by state law. |
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As in the American jurisdictions that have preserved it, this type of marriage can be difficult to prove. |
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In most common law jurisdictions, there was no common law right to recover civil damages for the wrongful death of a person. |
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Some jurisdictions recognize five elements, duty, breach, actual cause, proximate cause, and damages. |
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In civil law jurisdictions, the company's constitution is normally consolidated into a single document, often called the charter. |
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However, in many jurisdictions the members of the company are permitted to ratify transactions which would otherwise fall foul of this principle. |
|
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It is also largely accepted in most jurisdictions that this principle should be capable of being abrogated in the company's constitution. |
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In some jurisdictions this extends to prohibiting a company from providing financial assistance for the purchase of its own shares. |
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There are currently over 170 jurisdictions in the United States, and over 30 jurisdictions in other countries. |
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The jurisdictions are not defined by the administrative divisions of Iceland but are mainly a mixture of counties and municipalities. |
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In some cases it must be unanimous, while in other jurisdictions it may be a majority or supermajority. |
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In such jurisdictions, nothing must be filed with the court until a dispute develops requiring actual judicial intervention. |
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Some jurisdictions, like California, still authorize general denials of each and every allegation in the complaint. |
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Capital punishment may be imposed in some jurisdictions for the most serious crimes. |
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In most continental European jurisdictions, judges have more power in a trial and the role and powers of a jury are often restricted. |
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In jurisdictions where the size of a jury varies, in general the size of juries tends to be larger if the crime alleged is more serious. |
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Often jurisdictions pay token amounts for jury duty and many issue stipends to cover transportation expenses for jurors. |
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The legal year, in English law as well as in other common law jurisdictions, is the calendar during which the judges sit in court. |
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Stated at this level of abstraction, the framework is a useful grounding for comparative study between common law and civil law jurisdictions. |
|
Indeed, the ancient Roman custom of arbitration has now been adapted in many common law jurisdictions to a more inquisitorial form. |
|
The Multistate Bar Examination is part of the bar examination in almost all United States jurisdictions. |
|
Malaysian law is also based on other jurisdictions namely Australia and India. |
|
Certain Singapore statutes are not based on English enactments but on legislation from other jurisdictions. |
|
In such situations, court decisions from those jurisdictions on the original legislation are often examined. |
|
However, the test in Gough has been disapproved of in some Commonwealth jurisdictions. |
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He still has to prove his case in a civil action, unless the doctrine of collateral estoppel applies, as it does in most American jurisdictions. |
|
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In certain Common Law jurisdictions, such as India or Pakistan, the power to pass such writs is a Constitutionally guaranteed power. |
|
The community property concept originated in civil law jurisdictions but is now also found in some common law jurisdictions. |
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The commonwealth of Puerto Rico allows property to be owned as community property also as do several Native American jurisdictions. |
|
Contributory negligence in common law jurisdictions is generally a defense to a claim based on negligence, an action in tort. |
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In some jurisdictions it may be applied by the court in a tort matter irrespective of whether it was pleaded as a defense. |
|
There is safe harbor in many jurisdictions to use a patented invention for research. |
|
Infringement can be addressed by civil litigation and, in several jurisdictions, under criminal law. |
|
Decisions from similar jurisdictions can also be cited for their persuasive value. |
|
These include writings of the old authorities as well as contemporary writers from similar jurisdictions. |
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Additionally, some jurisdictions deviate from the official UCC by tailoring the language to meet their unique needs and preferences. |
|
Some jurisdictions in North America have passed bans on use of sharia, framed as restrictions on religious or foreign laws. |
|
However, many other jurisdictions do not allow graduates of unaccredited law schools to sit for their bar examination. |
|
Restatements are rare in common law jurisdictions outside of the United States. |
|
Some jurisdictions, with a large number of ministers, may designate ministers to be either in the inner or outer ministry or cabinet. |
|
Indeed, several jurisdictions use CO measurement as the basis of smoke control. |
|
In most jurisdictions, the job of handling title defects rests primarily with the title company. |
|
Minimum Data Sets and RAP Sheets for all jurisdictions are available and kept in compliance with state regulations. |
|
In modern times the Inner Hebrides have formed part of two separate local government jurisdictions, one to the north and the other to the south. |
|
In some jurisdictions, it is illegal to fire a person for blowing the whistle on an employer. |
|
Wherever two jurisdictions come into contact, special economic opportunities arise for border trade. |
|
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Today, one third of the world's population live in common law jurisdictions or in systems mixed with civil law. |
|
In common law jurisdictions, scholarly work is seldom cited as authority for what the law is. |
|
Roman Dutch common law is a development of Roman Dutch law by courts in the Roman Dutch common law jurisdictions. |
|
Thus, Roman law is often still a mandatory subject for law students in civil law jurisdictions. |
|
The veedor, or overseer, position quickly disappeared in most jurisdictions, subsumed into the position of factor. |
|
The Code influences a quarter of the world's jurisdictions such as that of in Continental Europe, the Americas and Africa. |
|
In some jurisdictions, other restrictions existed, such as requiring voters to practice a given religion. |
|
Many such jurisdictions are already directly represented within the Commonwealth, particularly through the Commonwealth Family. |
|
There are a number of smaller statutory jurisdictions, such as appeals from ecclesiastical and professional bodies. |
|
Some courts, such as the Crown Court in England and Wales may have both trial and appellate jurisdictions. |
|
The royal judges created a body of law by combining local customs they were made aware of through traveling and visiting local jurisdictions. |
|
In most civil law jurisdictions, courts function under an inquisitorial system. |
|
Case law, in common law jurisdictions, is the set of decisions of adjudicatory tribunals or other rulings that can be cited as precedent. |
|
Judges are bound by the law of binding precedent in England and Wales and other common law jurisdictions. |
|
If the two courts are in separate, parallel jurisdictions, there is no conflict, and two lines of precedent may persist. |
|
In that situation, courts will look to holdings of other jurisdictions for persuasive authority. |
|
By contrast, decisions in civil law jurisdictions are generally very short, referring only to statutes. |
|
In general, court decisions of common law jurisdictions give a sufficient ratio decidendi as to guide future courts. |
|
Thus common law systems are adopting one of the approaches long common in civil law jurisdictions. |
|
The jurisdictions overlap in some cases, and cases started in one division may be transferred by court order to another where appropriate. |
|
|
Governments generally regulate what drugs can be marketed, how drugs are marketed, and in some jurisdictions, drug pricing. |
|
In most jurisdictions, therapeutic goods must be registered before they are allowed to be marketed. |
|
As a result of such findings, many jurisdictions now advocate or require child passengers to use specially designed child restraints. |
|
In some jurisdictions children below a certain size are forbidden to travel in front car seats. |
|
In many jurisdictions, bus drivers require a special licence above and beyond a regular driver's licence. |
|
As a result, the pope was often called upon to intervene in quarrels, affirm monarchs, and decide jurisdictions. |
|
Various jurisdictions and advocates have differing priorities for access, availability and funding sources. |
|
Both state and local jurisdictions can further add restrictions on the use and safety requirements of display fireworks. |
|
Typically, these jurisdictions will require a licensed operator to discharge the show. |
|
In some jurisdictions foods described as sausages must meet regulations governing their content. |
|
British brewpubs are not required to double up as restaurants, as is the case in some jurisdictions. |
|
Companies may indicate with a number of different strategies, though not all of these meet legal requirements in all jurisdictions. |
|
Being independently administered jurisdictions, they do not form part of either the United Kingdom or the British Overseas Territories. |
|
Discussion between the relevant communication regulators in the two jurisdictions is under way in an attempt to resolve the issue. |
|
In some jurisdictions, including several countries, the different branches of government are located in different settlements. |
|
All three legal jurisdictions need Royal Assent from the Privy Council on its primary legislation. |
|
Legislation was introduced in many jurisdictions reversing union collective bargaining rights, and many jobs were lost to contractors. |
|
At the same time there were many other jurisdictions that were British dominions, for example Cyprus. |
|
The people of both jurisdictions needed to approve the agreement in order to give effect to it. |
|
In jurisdictions such as the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, voters may rank as many or as few candidates as they wish. |
|
|
Taken together with the separate jurisdictions of Alderney and Sark it forms the Bailiwick of Guernsey. |
|
There are also differences in the terminology used between the jurisdictions. |
|
In some jurisdictions, such statutes may overrule judicial decisions or codify the topic covered by several contradictory or ambiguous decisions. |
|
Unlike common law systems, civil law jurisdictions deal with case law apart from any precedent value. |
|
While civil law jurisdictions place little reliance on court decisions, they tend to generate a phenomenal number of reported legal opinions. |
|
Smaller jurisdictions, such as cities, are usually guaranteed by their regional or national levels of government. |
|
Most jurisdictions prohibit trade, except under license, of many types of drugs through the use of drug prohibition laws. |
|
This approach has been rejected in most Commonwealth jurisdictions even in those where UK cases are generally regarded as persuasive. |
|
Its services to its clients include incorporating and operating shell companies in friendly jurisdictions on their behalf. |
|
Official designations, jurisdictions and command structures of these agencies vary considerably. |
|
This idea was passed on in the Commonwealth to other common law jurisdictions. |
|
Border trade, in general, refers to the flow of goods and services across the international borders between jurisdictions. |
|
Where border trade is done for tax evasion it forms part of the underground economy of both jurisdictions. |
|
In addition, the importation and exportation of goods are subject to trade agreements between the importing and exporting jurisdictions. |
|
Its purpose is to foster common understanding between elected representatives from these jurisdictions. |
|
They are independently administered jurisdictions, and do not form part of either the United Kingdom or the British Overseas Territories. |
|
In some jurisdictions, it is illegal to import, breed, release, possess, sell, distribute, trade, transport, hunt, or trap Eurasian boars. |
|
This revived Roman law, in turn, became the foundation of law in all civil law jurisdictions. |
|
Many jurisdictions provide a statutory or constitutional right for litigants to appeal adverse decisions. |
|
Some jurisdictions maintain a system of intermediate appellate courts, which are subject to the review of higher appellate courts. |
|
|
Voluntary manslaughter in some jurisdictions is a lesser included offense of murder. |
|
In Scotland and some Commonwealth of Nations jurisdictions the offence of culpable homicide might apply. |
|
It occurs where death results from serious negligence, or, in some jurisdictions, serious recklessness. |
|
In some jurisdictions, an heir apparent can automatically lose that status by breaching certain constitutional rules. |
|
In some jurisdictions, courts able to hear appeals are known as an appellate division. |
|
This concerns the relationships both between courts in different jurisdictions, and between courts within the same jurisdiction. |
|
Over the course of the 19th and 20th centuries, franchise jurisdictions were largely eliminated. |
|
There is a legally defined maximum size of a serving in some jurisdictions. |
|
Coins from the British dependencies and territories that use the pound as their currency are sometimes found in change in other jurisdictions. |
|
Jackpot and Players have filed gaming applications in all jurisdictions where Players operates riverboats. |
|
In addition, 48 jurisdictions now recognize limited liability companies as legal entities. |
|
This provision goes against the current worldwide trend in legislating against marital rape in other jurisdictions. |
|
Many jurisdictions have treated Gideon as an unfunded mandate. |
|
They are characterized by a high level of tacitness and embeddedness that can be made use of in different jurisdictions. |
|
In fact, many jurisdictions encourage this by allowing for special reduced tax rates for IPCos formed in their jurisdiction. |
|
In these jurisdictions, conduct tantamount to piracy could be prosecuted as cognately related ordinary crimes. |
|
For many decedents, this is a conscious moment of horrendous fear and therefore compensable under the law in most jurisdictions. |
|
However, the use of national discretions can also impair comparability across jurisdictions and increase variability in risk-weighted assets. |
|
Following the ceremony, honor guard teams from the Washington metropolitan jurisdictions participated in a drill competition. |
|
Most American jurisdictions followed the reforms in New York and England. |
|
|
The various methods of trial that existed at civil law were also dealt with in this volume, as were the jurisdictions of the several courts, from the lowest to the highest. |
|
Jurors are generally required to keep their deliberations in strict confidence during the trial and deliberations, and in some jurisdictions even after a verdict is rendered. |
|
Customary law is a recognized source of law within jurisdictions of the civil law tradition, where it may be subordinate to both statutes and regulations. |
|
In most jurisdictions, directors owe strict duties of good faith, as well as duties of care and skill, to safeguard the interests of the company and the members. |
|
One benefit of shareholders' agreement is that they will usually be confidential, as most jurisdictions do not require shareholders' agreements to be publicly filed. |
|
The main agent who deals with the company's management and business is the board of directors, but in many jurisdictions other officers can be appointed too. |
|
There are, however, many specific categories of corporations and other business organizations which may be formed in various countries and jurisdictions throughout the world. |
|
In several civil law jurisdictions, the highest courts consider questions of fact settled by the lower court and will only consider questions of law. |
|
Certain jurisdictions, also provide for breaches where professionals, such as doctors, fail to warn of risks associated with medical treatments or procedures. |
|
While the term was first coined and is often used in the United States, it has also been applied in other countries, particularly common law jurisdictions. |
|
Many jurisdictions enacted statutes to create a right to such recovery. |
|
Most if not all jurisdictions in the United States require solemnization in addition to a marriage license for there to be a legally valid marriage. |
|
In some jurisdictions, historically all property was owned by the monarch and it devolved through feudal land tenure or other feudal systems of loyalty and fealty. |
|
The law of torts for various jurisdictions has developed independently. |
|
The equivalent of tort in civil law jurisdictions is delict. |
|
In other jurisdictions they are regulated at the state level, or at both state and national levels by various bodies, as is the case in Australia. |
|
Courts may choose to obey precedent of international jurisdictions, but this is not an application of the doctrine of stare decisis, because foreign decisions are not binding. |
|
In addition, a growing number of jurisdictions, including New Jersey, Delaware, Alaska, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Idaho have abolished the rule against perpetuities. |
|
A tort, in common law jurisdictions, is a civil wrong that causes someone else to suffer loss or harm resulting in legal liability for the person who commits the tortious act. |
|
In colonial times, the concept of consideration was exported to many common law countries, but it is unknown in Scotland and in civil law jurisdictions. |
|
|
For example, a few jurisdictions allow actions for negligent infliction of emotional distress even in the absence of physical injury to the plaintiff, but most do not. |
|
Civil law jurisdictions, on the other hand, place less emphasis on judicial review and only the parliament or legislature has the power to effect law. |
|
This will be Acres' first system and bonusing implementation in the State of Louisiana, continuing the company's expansion into new jurisdictions. |
|
Article 20 provided for the protection of heritable offices, superiorities, heritable jurisdictions, offices for life, and jurisdictions for life after the union. |
|
The right of nations to determine their own political status and exercise permanent sovereignty within the limits of their territorial jurisdictions is widely recognized. |
|
Precise definitions of the offence may vary between jurisdictions. |
|
The Corpus Juris Secundum is an encyclopedia whose main content is a compendium of the common law and its variations throughout the various state jurisdictions. |
|
In some jurisdictions, the judge's powers may be shared with a jury. |
|
Maine is divided into political jurisdictions designated as counties. |
|
Borders are geographic boundaries of political entities or legal jurisdictions, such as governments, sovereign states, federated states, and other subnational entities. |
|
The barangays that have jurisdictions over these places only oversee the welfare of the city's constituents and cannot exercise their executive powers. |
|
In many jurisdictions, by marriage minors become legally emancipated. |
|
Most jurisdictions allow marriage at a younger age with parental or judicial approval, and some also allow younger people to marry if the woman is pregnant. |
|
Until recently, the marriageable age for women was lower in many jurisdictions than for men, but in many places has now been raised to those of men. |
|
The principal that a grantor cannot establish a spendthrift trust to avoid his own creditors is not found in the laws of many foreign jurisdictions. |
|
Many of the jurisdictions which mandate the live release of sport fish also require the use of artificial lures and barbless hooks to minimise the chance of injury to fish. |
|
All jurisdictions have their own prison systems, although the Australia Capital Territory has only one remand centre and one periodic detention centre. |
|
The proposed merger has now been cleared by competition authorities in all jurisdictions in which such clearance is a condition precedent to the transaction. |
|
In some jurisdictions private hire vehicles can only be hired from the dispatch office, and must be assigned each fare by the office by radio or phone. |
|
In most jurisdictions, morphine is classified as an ethical drug. |
|
|
The GOG also should develop procedures for the sharing of seized assets with third party jurisdictions that assist in the conduct of investigations. |
|
The possession of burglarous tools is illegal in many jurisdictions. |
|
Some jurisdictions, particularly the United States and many of its states and Switzerland, impose the higher of regular income tax or an alternative tax. |
|
A few jurisdictions compute net income as a fixed percentage of gross revenues for some types of businesses, particularly branches of nonresidents. |
|
Most jurisdictions either do not tax income earned outside the jurisdiction or allow a credit for taxes paid to other jurisdictions on such income. |
|
It also allowed consideration of yet a few more to continue not fully decided, which led in some cases to adoption in one or more jurisdictions, but not all. |
|
Many jurisdictions are now beginning to discourage supplemental fish planting in favour of harvest controls, and habitat improvement and protection. |
|
Some jurisdictions, such as Saskatchewan, sell gas by volume only. |
|
Traditional franchise jurisdictions of various powers were held by municipal corporations, religious houses, guilds, early universities, Welsh Marches, and Counties Palatine. |
|
Congress can rein injudicial activism by limiting the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and the jurisdictions of all lower federal courts. |
|
Civil law jurisdictions rely, by definition, on codification. |
|
The definition of manslaughter differs among legal jurisdictions. |
|
However, most jurisdictions also recognize that this right may be waived. |
|
Many species will freely move through different jurisdictions. |
|
District court jurisdictions also use an older version of this division. |
|
In jurisdictions where there is no legal distinction between aerodrome and airport, which term to use in the name of an aerodrome may be a commercial decision. |
|
China also has separate jurisdictions of Hong Kong and Macao. |
|
Tax havens are jurisdictions which facilitate reduced taxes. |
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Many jurisdictions adopt a list of specific predicate crimes for money laundering prosecutions, while others criminalize the proceeds of any serious crimes. |
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The FATF currently comprises 34 member jurisdictions and 2 regional organisations, representing most major financial centres in all parts of the globe. |
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