Sentences with phrase «exercise due regard»

At all times, the insured should exercise due regard to the safety of the property.

Not exact matches

Of course Law provides that any fundamental right can be exercised only with due regard to morality and public order.
Government promised that the affected workers would be communicated in due course, about the administration's next line of action regarding possible re-engagement, after the on - going concessioning exercise affecting the agencies, departments and parastatals.
Low Impact Some types of cardio activity, such as running, are usually regarded as high impact exercises due to the impact on your joints while you take each stride.
also, regarding the exercises in the 2nd month, is there an alternative exercise i could do instead of the full bridge exercise and pyramid exercise due to neck problems?
Before anyone expresses concern that Amazon is now stripping books from its retail website due to simply not thinking they are worthy, the terms of service for using KDP have always allowed the retailer to do so, a right they have exercised in the past in regard to immoral, pornographic, and pirated works.
However, the individual investor is expected to exercise due diligence while taking a decision regarding the investments which he or she proposes to make.
At the same time, the expert assumes a responsibility to the client to exercise due care with regard to the investigations carried out and to provide opinion evidence that is soundly based.
It presages a law captured by the rhetoric of the right to freedom of expression without due regard to the value underlying the particular exercise of that right; a law in which, under the guise of the right to freedom of expression, the «right» to offend can be exercised without responsibility or restraint providing it does not cause a disruption or disturbance in the nature of public disorder; a law in which an impoverished amoral concept of «public order» is judicially ordained; a law in which the right to freedom of expression trumps — or tramples upon — other rights and values which are the vital rights and properties of a free and democratic society; a law to which any number of vulnerable individuals and minorities may be exposed to uncivil, and even odious, ethnic, sexist, homophobic, anti-Christian, anti-Semitic, and anti-Islamic taunts providing no public disorder results; a law in which good and decent people can be used as fodder to promote a cause or promote an action for which they are not responsible and over which they have no direct control; a law which demeans the dignity of the persons adversely affected by those asserting their right to freedom of expression in a disorderly or offensive manner; a law in which the mores or standards of society are set without regard to the reasonable expectations of citizens in a free and democratic society; and a law marked by a lack of empathy by the sensibilities, feelings and emotional frailties of people who can be deeply and genuinely affronted by language and behaviour that is beyond the pale in a civil and civilised society.
In this respect, restraint ought to be exercised in the discovery process, and it should be conducted with due regard to costs and efficiency.
In all of these situations regarding possible disclosures of protected health information about an patient who is not present or is unable to agree to such disclosures due to incapacity or other emergency circumstance, disclosures should be in accordance with the exercise of professional judgment as to the patient's best interest.
Employers do have difficulty ensuring they have exercised due diligence regarding vendors and independent contractors since there is sometimes not a direct employer - employee relationship.
As the question of written «seller consents» is a major point, it is not only reasonable to believe that with all the Attorneys and high priced experts, at the trough, that the Tribunal had «not been persuaded» based on their proper review of current and preexisting written «seller consents» (that would have formed part of the pertinent Listing Agreements), but even moreso that: by using the word «persuaded» the Competition Tribunal wrongly gave the impression that they had exercised proper due diligence regarding this question — when in fact, they had not exercised any!
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