Sentences with phrase «court disapproved»

The Colorado Supreme Court disapproved the trial court's approach, and declared that Colorado trial courts have no authority to order a parent to continue living in Colorado.
Given all the conditions imposed by the court, it might be more appropriate to say that the Ohio Supreme Court disapproved of the practice, rendered it extremely unlikely to be effective, and allowed it to go on any way because it ultimately couldn't find a provision in Ohio's ethics rules to prohibit it.
But the majority of this court disapprove of that law because they prefer to protect arbitrators and their awards when they fail to disclose prior relationships with parties or counsel.

Not exact matches

After all, as the rather grisly specifics of the practice of animal sacrifice suggest, it would require a rather unnatural detachment for the members of the Court not to disapprove of any of the variety of religious beliefs or practices that they encounter in the cases they must decide.
Perhaps the court believes that citizens entering a public building to obtain a public service shouldn't have to confront religious symbols of which they disapprove.
Under the test, first proposed by Supreme Court Justice Sandra O'Connor in a 1984 case from Pawtucket, Rhode Island, a display violates the Establishment Clause if it amounts to an official endorsement of religion, that is, if it suggests that the government approves a particular religious message (or disapproves such a message, though that issue does not regularly arise).
The Stenberg dissenters repeatedly cited and quoted Justice O'Connor's abortion opinions from the 1980s, in which she had criticized the Court for operating as «the nation's ex officio medical board with powers to approve or disapprove medical and operative practices and standards throughout the United States.»
The doctor at the center of the Silver scandal «disapproved» of him and his law firm and referred cancer patients there only as long as the former speaker was funneling him state money for research, the court papers claim.
The doctor at the center of the corruption charges against former Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver «disapproved» of him and his law firm and referred cancer patients there only as long as Silver was funneling him state money for research, new court papers claim.
«The Government expects that Dr. Taub will testify that for many years he disapproved of [Silver's] law firm Weitz & Luxenberg because it made millions of dollars from representing mesothelioma victims (enough to buy «private jets»), and yet it did not donate money to support mesothelioma research,» federal prosecutors wrote in the new court papers, which were filed Monday.
At a Chapter 13 confirmation hearing, required as the basis for the order approving the plan and ordering the creditors to accept it (the hearing is called a section 341 hearing, or simply, â $ the three forty - oneâ $), the court either approves or disapproves the debtorâ $ ™ s repayment plan, depending on whether it meets the Bankruptcy Codeâ $ ™ s requirements for confirmation.
[18] To the extent the doctrine of champerty and maintenance remains relevant in Canadian common law, even as means of protecting the courts and vulnerable litigants against abuses, its purpose is not and was never intended to be achieved by conferring on the courts the discretion to inquire into and approve or disapprove of a plaintiff's funding arrangements as a condition precedent to instituting or pursuing litigation.
The practice of substituting for the evidence a stipulation of facts not shown to have received the approval of the court below is disapproved.
Although only the younger child in Vaughan was the court's «first consideration» (being just under 18), the Court of Appeal strongly disapproved of the district judge's description of him as the only relevant child: «Such was a piece of shorthand which I myself would not have used... it by no means follows that the interests of adult children undergoing further education are irrelevant to enquiries of this sort... it would be reasonable for the wife to buy a house with three bedrooms... even if they were unlikely to live there full - time.&rcourt's «first consideration» (being just under 18), the Court of Appeal strongly disapproved of the district judge's description of him as the only relevant child: «Such was a piece of shorthand which I myself would not have used... it by no means follows that the interests of adult children undergoing further education are irrelevant to enquiries of this sort... it would be reasonable for the wife to buy a house with three bedrooms... even if they were unlikely to live there full - time.&rCourt of Appeal strongly disapproved of the district judge's description of him as the only relevant child: «Such was a piece of shorthand which I myself would not have used... it by no means follows that the interests of adult children undergoing further education are irrelevant to enquiries of this sort... it would be reasonable for the wife to buy a house with three bedrooms... even if they were unlikely to live there full - time.»
For example, in rejecting the Court majority's explanation for upholding an administrative decision that had been previously disapproved, he wrote in frustration, «I give up.
Lord Hope disapproved of the approach taken in X v West Midlands, and the rest of the court (apart from Lord Scott) agreed with him.
According to the polling, when consumers learn that the company picks the arbitrator, and they give up their right to take the case to court and binding arbitration applies even if they are seriously injured, 81 percent disapprove.
The Court of Appeal disapproved of its approach, stating that «[m] aking a blanket assertion that both forms of privilege apply, in instances where one or the other is clearly unavailable, is a litigation tactic that ought to be discouraged».
The FC rejected this argument and clarified that although the doctrine of champerty is relevant to the extent that the courts have power to render champertous agreements unenforceable, and thereby prohibiting the funder from getting a share of the proceeds after litigation, [18] it does not confer courts the discretion to approve or disapprove of funding arrangements as a pre-condition before litigation.
Vancouver Self Sufficiency Spousal Support Lawyers at MacLean Law took careful note a recent hard hitting, no nonsense decision of Madam Justice Fitzpatrick that noted a wife's failure to disclose and failure to apply herself to earn an income and which decision also disapproved of her unilateral move to Mexico and her attempts through her lies to deceive the court.
In saying this the Court of Appeal impliedly disapproved the ruling in Brigden v American Express Bank Ltd [2000] IRLR 94, 631 IRLB 13, [1999] All ER (D) 1130 in which it was held that UCTA 1977, s 3 extended to employment contracts.
But while his legal analysis was not specifically disapproved, the Court of Appeal did criticise his conclusions on the facts and evidence and also considerably altered the stage lighting surrounding considerations of bias and predetermination in local authority decisions.
If this court now concludes that all these cases were wrongly decided they present an open road and a fast car to the money maker who disapproves of the principles developed by the House of Lords that now govern the exercise of the judicial discretion in big money cases.»
(a) Every such reorganization plan shall be referred to an appropriate committee, to be determined by the Clerks of the Senate and the House of Representatives, with the approval of the President and Speaker, which committee shall not later than thirty days after the date of the Governor's presentation of said plan hold a public hearing thereon and shall not later than ten days after such hearing report that it approves or disapproves such plan and such reorganization plan shall have the force of law upon expiration of the sixty calendar days next following its presentation by the governor to the general court, unless disapproved by a majority vote of the members of either of the two branches of the general court present and voting, the general court not having been prorogued within such sixty days.
The Supreme Court has long disapproved of this kind of game playing.
When two parties in a divorce have engaged in mediation and submitted a separation agreement, the court can not change that agreement, although the judge can approve or disapprove the agreement created through the mediation process.
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