Sentences with phrase «entirely up to the judge»

Keep in mind that ticket dismissal is usually only offered to first - time offenders, and permission to take a traffic course for dismissal is entirely up to the judge.

Not exact matches

The solution that Citi has come up with — probably the only solution — is to get out of the custody business in Argentina entirely and make this someone else's problem, though let's pause here and say that is a somewhat drastic solution: U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa has basically shut down a U.S. bank's legitimate business in Argentina.
Advance to the Rear — French Style Much lest resistant to new technological ideas than their neighbours across the Channel the French came up with some highly imaginative proposals in the 1930s as Karl Ludvigsen relates / Vauxhall Velox & Wyvern — Buyer's Guide / Royal Restoration — Michael Ware looks back at the restoration of a Royal Daimler that was carried out for the Queen's Silver Jubilee / Commercially Speaking — Lighter Commercials / Dashboard Instruments — Part Two — Workshop / Cammy Sammy - Salmson Twin Cam / Classic Commemoration — Richard Cass reports on the Le Mans Classic / Singer Super Six — Michael Worthington - Williams recalls a Singer «buult like a battleship graceful as a yacht» / Coventry Cat — Fitted with the first engine entirely designed by Jaguar the XK 120 set the standard by which so many postwar sports cars are judged.
So, standards do differ, and prospective mortgagees judged to be riskier are offered loans at higher interest rates or more points up front etc, or declined entirely.
Nobody is forcing you to read it, and he even says «so it is entirely up to you to judge if this would represent good value for money for you.»
Essentially you're getting a NES game without the nostalgia so it is entirely up to you to judge if this would represent good value for money.
So it is up entirely to the judge's discretion.
Since the first judicial opinion endorsing the use of Technology Assisted Review (or TAR) was written by Judge Andrew J. Peck in 2012, an entire legal industry has grown up on the premise of streamlining the document review process in discovery — that is, taking a repetitive task traditionally performed entirely by attorneys and introducing the concept of computer assistance to increase efficiency and improve consistency.
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