Sentences with phrase «because civil code»

In Arseneault (Succession de) c. École Sacré - Coeur de Montréal, 2013 QCCA 1664 (CanLII), the QCA held that because the Civil Code of Quebec imposes a general duty to act in good faith in contractual relationships (and employment is considered a contractual relationship), a teacher whose contracted was not renewed was entitled to a formal (and positive) letter of reference.
This is because civil code legal systems are based upon a collection of codified laws set out in statutes which, generally, set out all the essential terms of the contracts which fall within their scope and these statutory terms automatically form part of the contract in the absence of the express agreement of the contracting parties to modify or disapply the terms.
This is because Civil Code systems tend to be more rigid.
Because civil codes also include nationality and citizenship laws, the UNHCR (UN Refugee Agency)'s RefWorld database also includes foreign civil codes.

Not exact matches

Thus and so shall you do (the Code embraces the full range of torah — cultic, ceremonial, civil, sociological, theological) because I am Yahweh, I am holy; and my holiness is fulfilled in you in honoring this torah; in obedience to this, you are holy, you appropriate my power, you conform to my character.
The regulatory parent policy, set forth by Title VII of the Code of the U.S., the Civil Rights Act of 1964, states that no person should be discriminated against because of their race, color, religion, or sex.
Amends § § 4112.02, 4112.05, 4112.08, and 4112.14 of the Revised Code to specify that discrimination by an employer against any person because of the person's credit history is an unlawful discriminatory practice under the Ohio Civil Rights Law.
«Miami Beach is at such grave risk of sea water flooding today that it should preemptively be declared a disaster zone — not because of global - warming - driven sea level rise but due to a seeming total lack of sensible civil engineering standards and sensible building codes
As to the use of experts in electronic records management, it is not yet the practice of lawyers to use such experts, but it should be because the Evidence Acts require it in order to use electronic records as evidence — e.g. s. 31.2 (1)(a) of the Canada Evidence Act, and, s. 34.1 (5), (5.1) of the Ontario Evidence Act, and the Evidence Acts of 9 other jurisdictions in Canada contain the same requirement (including the records provisions of Book 7 of the Civil Code of Quebec).
Because of the horrible things that took place during the U. S. Civil war, it inspired a national conduct code for soldiers.
And it came about because the Supreme Court of the day included members who understood that concept as it was articulated in French, in Quebec Civil Code.
Many of the important distinctions in Canadian Law as it now exists came about because of the «rubbing together» of concepts and ideas that existed in either the Common Law or in Civil Code.
I say English because there is a series of such beasts helping legal professionals and scholars explore the history of the text of the Quebec civil codes, produced under the auspices of the Quebec Research Centre of Private and Comparative Law.
On Friday, January 25, 2013, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in a tight majority judgment (five: McLachlin, Deschamps, Abella, Cromwell and Karakatsanis, against four: LeBel, Fish, Rothstein and Moldaver) that the Quebec Civil Code discriminates against common - law spouses because it does not grant them the same rights as married couples in regard to spousal support and division of property.
The subrogation claim, although potentially applicable to non-signatories, did not give rise to fee entitlement because nothing allowed cross-complainant to step in the shoes of any party to the construction loan agreement — so, if cross-complainant could not recover for fees, Bank could not either under either contractual interpretation or Civil Code section 1717 reciprocity principles.
The Task Force was formed because the sharply contrasting positions of the LRCC (the Law Reform Commission of Canada) and the OLRC (Ontario Law Reform Commission) as to reform of the law of evidence, combined with the reception given the LRCC's Evidence Code, threatened an imminent split in the law of evidence into two, criminal and civil laws of evidence, and therefore, separate federal and provincial laws of evidence.
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