Sentences with phrase «case in the grey area»

A case in the grey area could be a case not worth turning down because in the past an attorney on your staff had success in similar claims.

Not exact matches

But more often than not, you find yourself in a grey area where there is not a strong case to do something, where all incoming data have to be evaluated on their merits and policy options weighed up.
I remember there was a big debate later on, and the legal experts said a release clause wasn't legally binding, although it still seems a bit of a grey area, but in any case we certainly didn't help ourselves.
Most of the time, there are grey areas in every question, but not in this case: Swim the breaststroke, and do so with enthusiasm and a smile on your face when the race is called.
Some adult dating sites have names that don't really convey their oeuvre, but in the case of XXXMatch, there is no grey area concerning what they're there to accomplish for you.
Somewhere in that grey area between «obvious» and unintentional testing security breaches falls the case of former Southwest Allen County teacher Laura Farner.
This case is important to schools and individuals who serve students with disabilities because it addresses a very grey area in the Individuals with Disabilities Act.
The European Commission has published «interpretative guidelines» for the flight delay law, referencing case law in a bid to clarify some of the grey areas, but these are not legally binding on the airlines.
Moreover, in the grey area close cases (and the grey area is quite large) a particular fact pattern could easily be resolved either way by different fact finders, even if there is absolutely no dispute regarding the facts of the case.
Obviously there are many grey areas in here: whether a defect is «patent» or «latent» will depend on the facts of each case, and will typically not change regardless of whether there is an SPIS.
There is a «grey area» about suggesting to an expert that particular statements in his report might be omitted or rephrased when, perhaps, they do not show the client or the case in the best light, but are not crucial to the evidence or the expert's opinion.
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