Sentences with phrase «considered dicta»

This wasn't necessary for the holding in this case, which was about whether the person was a citizen, so this could be considered dicta.
Henry Clinton was Jean Louise's own kind, and now she did not consider the dictum particularly harsh.»

Not exact matches

Such faith in advertising is even more amazing when one considers economist John Kenneth Galbraith's dictum that the basic purpose of advertising is to get people to buy something they don't need.
Gentle Birth employs wellness promotion, integrative health care modalities, and responsiveness to the unique physiology unfolding in the mother and baby in all aspects of perinatal care, and follows the dictum, «First, Do No Harm» when considering any intervention.
Teaching Tips No One Told You «Strangely absent from any official curriculum and in certain cases considered a form of contraband offered only through secret conversations and in code, it is now time to reveal the discrete, covert formulas, practices, and dictums we long - time teachers know to be true.»
I'm not sure if Ruello considers himself a latter - day abstract illusionist — he seems to prefer the more technical term «big fat liar» to describe his penchant for visual fake - outs — but it's safe to say that Frank Stella's dictum that «what you see is what you see» does not apply to Ruello's Unknown Adventures in Unknown Spaces series.
Finally, the Court considered, obiter dicta, whether a DPA could exercise its supervisory and sanctioning powers under Article 28 of the Directive when the law applicable to data processing was the law of another Member State.
Whether or not one treats the majority opinion's public forum analysis of social networks as «dicta» (which is legalese for «stuff in an opinion I don't like so I don't consider binding»), all 8 Supreme Court justices agreed that subscribers have a First Amendment right to access information and speak online, and that the government can not prohibit a person from accessing content that has nothing to do with preventing repeat offenses — even when the repeat offense is child molestation, and the evidence arguably supported that child molesters were particularly prone to repetition.
Lord Sumption also noted that the term «piercing the corporate veil» is widely misused and that the decided cases considering it are both confusing and confused; the area is «heavily burdened by authority, much of it characterised by incautious dicta and inadequate reasoning».
These dicta comments suggest the Court of Appeal did not consider the Legislature had ousted the possibility of a common law tort by enacting the Privacy Act.
This must be correct, bearing in mind the dicta in the leading cases in relation to the caution that must be extended to considering new exceptions.
After considering certain dicta in Knox v Gye (1872) LR 5 HL 656 and Paragon Finance plc v Thakerar & Co [1998] EWCA Civ 1249, [1999] 1 All ER 400, Lord Justice Moore - Bick concluded:
[16] Consider the following dictum of Lord Mance in Kennedy: «Both reasonableness review and proportionality involve considerations of weight and balance, with the intensity of the scrutiny and the weight to be given to any primary decision maker's view depending on the context».
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