Although slightly unrelated to
law qua law, this article published by the Wall Street Journal on January 11, 2011 has created much buzz in the legal world (and perhaps even typifies the upbringing of many...
Law qua law falls into the realm of I «it relations because the law, precisely by applying to all equally, treats each of its subjects impersonally» that is, as an «it.»
Yet if different wholes were subject to different
laws qua.
Not exact matches
So a religious individual or household might well ask: if my church,
qua employer, can get an exemption from anti-discrimination
laws, why not me as an individual or as a family as an employer or service provider?
Aregbesola who described Judiciary as sine
qua non in the propagation of good governance and rule of
law, said the failure of the sector will culminate failure for other arms of government, hence the need for it to be strengthened.
In Anglo - Saxon jurisdictions, cause in fact is often described as the «but for» test; in civil
law jurisdictions, this is the «conditio sine
qua non'test, i.e. cause as a necessary condition for a consequence.
In the case of
Qua v John Morrison Solicitors, the employment appeal tribunal confirmed that the
law doesn't put an upper cap on the amount of time off entitled to an employee.
Yet despite the fact that confidentiality is the sine
qua non of privilege — there can be no privilege without confidentiality — no statute, rule of the common
law or ethical rule imposes any confidentiality obligations on judges.
Because the exercise of that Member State power against its own nationals also directly affected the rights conferred on that Member State's national
qua EU citizen, the matter was held to fall within the jurisdiction of the CJEU as the ultimate guardian of the EU citizen's EU
law rights.