Sentences with phrase «action under this theory»

Not exact matches

Under certain conditions, as long as monetary policy has a larger effect on inflation than it does on financial stability risk and macroprudential policy has a larger effect on financial stability risk than it does on inflation, there would be no need, in theory, for the agencies responsible to coordinate their actions explicitly.
Indeed, Reinhold Niebuhr, perhaps the most influential American theologian relative to political and ethical action in this century, wrote his theories of sin under the grip of Soren Kierkegaard's more individualistic notions of the origin of sin.
Devine Command Theory is not a noble or honorable concept... if your god expects you (and apparenlty me) to excuse his actions under such a concept he is neither noble nor honorable.
In the theory of minimal secularism, only officials are under an obligation to provide public reasons: secularism is a constraint on state action and justification, not a duty on the part of citizens.
IN NO EVENT SHALL TOMMY BAHAMA OR ANY OF ITS AFFILIATED ENTITIES OR SUPPLIERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, PUNITIVE, INCIDENTAL, EXEMPLARY OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, WHETHER IN AN ACTION, UNDER CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR ANY OTHER THEORY, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE, INABILITY TO USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THE INFORMATION, SERVICES, PRODUCTS AND MATERIALS AVAILABLE FROM THE WEBSITE, EVEN IF TOMMY BAHAMA HAS BEEN PREVIOUSLY ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
Enslaved an action game title published by Namco Bandai has got a release date, Enslaved is currently in development under Ninja Theory which developed Heavenly Sword, the PlayStation 3 launch title.
Develop a theory of action for turning around under performing schools, and learn strategies for successful implementation.
What's tricky is that we actually operate under dual theories of action: an espoused theory and a theory in use.
Under the negligence theory, a defendant is held liable for the results of actions, or inaction, when an ordinary person in the same position should have foreseen that the conduct would create an unreasonable risk of harm to others.
Skilling, who was convicted in May 2006 on 19 counts of fraud and conspiracy for his role in the collapse of Houston - based Enron, based his appeal on the «honest services» theory under which executives who carry out the company's mission and do not personally profit from their actions are not guilty of criminal conduct.
As far as could you be liable for writing it... under our legal system you can be sued under a theory of negligence for just about any action someone thinks was unsafe or causes injury.
They also argued that to recover damages under the negligent activity theory, the plaintiff had to show their affirmative contemporaneous actions caused the injuries.
In chemical poisoning cases, product - liability actions are often brought under failure to warn or defective packaging theories.
Such actions are generally brought under a strict liability theory, which requires no showing of negligence on the part of a manufacturer or distributor.
While a product liability lawsuit is also a possible course of action, most cases will be brought under the theory of negligence.
Under this theory, a plaintiff only needs to show that the defendant's action was responsible for the plaintiff's injury.
A manufacturer can be held liable under a products liability theory for any of the following actions / inactions: negligently designing the product, negligently manufacturing the product, failing to warn of the products dangers, breaching a warranty or misrepresenting (either fraudulently or innocently) the product.
In other cases, plaintiffs have successfully argued that HMOs and other institutional defendants are vicariously liable for the actions of physicians under theories of respondeat superior and apparent authority.
Justice Thomas in his dissent, joined by Justice Kennedy, characterized Basic as a «judicially invented doctrine based on an economic theory adopted to ease the burden on plaintiffs bringing claims under an implied cause of action» while highlighting the dissent of Justices White and O'Connor in Basic.
Respondeat Superior: Under this theory, an employer may be liable to a victim in a negligence action when their employee commits a negligent act while acting within the «course and scope» of their employment.
The Second Motion Judge concluded «In my view, it is essentially an alternative theory of liability for the same complaint... I agree with the Plaintiffs that the Amended Claim does not advance a «new cause of action» for the purposes of the Limitations Act and under normal circumstances an amendment would be permissible under Rule 26.01 [of the Rules of Civil Procedure, R.R.O. 1990, Reg.
2d 651)-- remedies provision of the Property Condition Disclosure Act are unenforceable beyond the requirement to give a $ 500 credit at closing should the seller refuse to provide the form, thereafter, common law or statutory remedies, if any, are available; information contained in the disclosure statement survives neither contract nor closing; seller answering «unknown» on the disclosure form triggers a duty to inquire on the part of the buyer and relieves the seller of any potential liability for defects that arise in regard to the part of the premises covered by the question; any information disclosed during the sale of the property merges into the contract and does not exist on its own basis of a common law cause of action; buyer's action based on breach of the disclosure statement is dismissed on the grounds that no such cause of action is created by RPL Article 14; buyer's relief exists under common law contract theories and buyers have not proven their prima faciecase under those theories
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