Sentences with phrase «always supersedes»

I assume that the state wouldn't actually be able to punish you, because you said that federal always supersedes state, but I'm not sure if my interpretation is correct.
Jim: John, I think there are certain areas of law where the law firm's brand almost always supersedes the individual attorney.
There has been guilt on all sides, a guilt which is inexcusable, but nevertheless is always superseded by the mercy of God.
In a given situation, the rights of the people committing the immoral act are always superseded by the rights of the potential victims.
Remember that an obvious price action level will always supersede a Fibonacci level.
New South Wales, in permitting non-lawyer shareholding in law firms, has required that confidentiality and other duties to clients must always supersede disclosure duties to shareholders.

Not exact matches

YOUR FALSE ACCUSATION AND ITS IMPLICATIONS This is an egregious error, a product of always a «constant vilification without checking your facts» in which attacking colleagues often supersedes getting it right.
Given a cursory glance even just a month ago, this was going to be a slower year compared to 2015, with Lego Dimensions always planned as a game to last two or more years and Disney Infinity 3.0 to also be supported with expansions, instead of being superseded.
But those decisions will always be provisional, the best one can achieve right now, liable to being superseded by the decisions of tomorrow.
They might be unknown to many of my younger colleagues, so I'll take the liberty of naming a few (without details of their distinguished careers): McGill's Marianne Scott had just recently been appointed National Librarian of Canada; Diana Priestly was just finishing her tenure as founding Law Librarian at the University of Victoria; Balfour Halévy, Osgoode's founding Chief Law Librarian, was still in charge at Osgoode and leading the charge nationally; Tom Shorthouse was centre - stage at the University of British Columbia (and wherever there was a piano); Edmonton was doubly - blessed with Lillian MacPherson (passionate about both women's studies and Iceland) at the University of Alberta and Shi - Sheng Hu (reluctant to discard superseded loose - leaf supplements) at the courthouse; the dynamic duo of Denis Marshall (at Queen's University, always so kind and supportive) and Denis Le May (at Laval, always so full of spritely humour) was in full swing; Ann Crocker was hard at work at the University of New Brunswick (though she hadn't yet been awarded the Order of Canada) as was Guy Tanguay at Sherbrooke; while Vicki Whitmell was re-inventing the law firm library at Osler.
This rule even supersedes any perceived needs of the parents — in the eyes of the law, the child always comes first.
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