If it is found to be patentable, the owner of the design patent is granted a 14-year right of exclusivity that is presumptively valid in court. |
|
Yet, neither a confession offered to a priest, nor a highly intimate disclosure offered to a therapist, is presumptively protected by privilege. |
|
Delays of slightly over three years at a single jurisdictional level also have been held to be presumptively unreasonable. |
|
So a stay that would last indefinitely would be presumptively prejudicial to the plaintiff. |
|
This is a self-dealing transaction, which would be presumptively illegal if professors owed a fiduciary duty to students. |
|
Any patient with suspected myxedema coma should be treated presumptively with thyroid hormone. |
|
Prior restraints on pure speech are highly disfavored and presumptively unconstitutional. |
|
Some states, such as Massachusetts, go even further, making all gun possession presumptively illegal, except for persons with special licenses. |
|
Whilst it is a presumptively child centred jurisdiction, it is not straightforwardly so. |
|
Parents are presumptively entitled to exercise complete discretion over the care, custody, and control of their children. |
|
In sharp contrast, in the U.S., the power to make domestic relations law is at least presumptively reserved to the states. |
|
The remaining 7 were presumptively protected by the common law. |
|
When you are labeled by the attorney general as a person of interest, presumptively responsible persons seem to lose all inhibitions in referring to you. |
|
Letters of credit are typically, and presumptively, irrevocable. |
|
The point is to enable personal decision making, rather than to serve some systemic value through the presumptively beneficial choices that free individuals would make. |
|
Thus, it fails to see gender power, where being male means being presumptively free from male violence and being female means being presumptively subject to male violence. |
|
Should multiple disclosure motions in a given criminal matter presumptively be brought before the same judge? |
|
The submission is to the same effect as the notion of a presumptively abusive relationship, which we would support. |
|
Existing administrative rules confirm that such documents are presumptively releasable to the public upon request. |
|
The Court held that detention for six months after a final removal order is entered is presumptively reasonable. |
|
|
The security ordered by an international judicial body will presumptively be reasonable. |
|
This information is presumptively open for public access according to this model policy. |
|
It is about not presumptively, and without evidence, violating the United Kingdom rights. |
|
Toxic industrial chemicals and materials are presumptively identified in the analytical chemistry section. |
|
The term human gene therapy came into use because it identified as presumptively beneficent, through the use of the word therapy, technologies that might have provoked more opposition if called human genetic engineering. |
|
This was especially so after the Supreme Court in R. v. Proulx appeared to endorse the notion that no offences were presumptively excluded from the conditional sentence regime. |
|
Those involved in the preparation of bills will take into account the requirement of explicitness so as to ensure that any political decision to exclude the operation of a presumptively applicable law is legally effective. |
|
The IRS took the position that the mere fact that LLCs are limited liability entities makes their activities presumptively passive. |
|
This transitional rule is consistent with a basic rule of statutory interpretation, which is that a statute presumptively should not be interpreted to interfere with vested rights. |
|
In cases of split custody, the amount to be paid by the paying parent is presumptively offset by taking the income of the receiving parent into account. |
|
For example, Colorado presumptively views restrictive agreements as not enforceable. |
|
That is why Americans make no apologies for the fact that all speech in the United States is presumptively protected as free expression, unless certain limited conditions are met. |
|
As a result, potential class members may find themselves presumptively included in more than one class action in more than one jurisdiction and consequently subject to conflicting determinations. |
|
Otherwise, there was a risk of the resolution becoming so politically charged as to depart from its original and presumptively noble goal of effectively reducing the global incidence of statelessness. |
|
According to the Supreme Court of New York, substantial evidence to the contrary is required to overcome a presumptively valid assessor's determination of value. |
|