The extent of the legal duty differs between a commercial property owner, a private property owner and a governmental property owner.
Not exact matches
In doing so, the lawyer should balance the
duty to effectively advocate for his or her client against the risk
of misleading counsel or a court if there is a misunderstanding as to the
extent of legal services the lawyer has been retained to provide.
The problem is simply stated as follows: Develop a principled approach to reconcile traditional accounts
of the rule
of law with the modern reality that administrative agencies and statutory tribunals who do not operate like or resemble the ordinary courts but who nevertheless occupy a large amount
of space in our
legal system and can not avoid making
legal determinations in exercising their statutory
duties which often implicate individual rights and interests to a greater
extent than judicial decisions.
An award may be made public with the consent
of all parties or where and to the
extent disclosure is required
of a party by
legal duty, to protect or pursue a
legal right or in relation to
legal proceedings before a court or other competent authority.
To what
extent can the person with a
legal right or even
duty to access the information compel disclosure
of these access methods?
A. the exclusive right to consent to medical, dental, and surgical treatment involving invasive procedures and to consent to psychiatric and psychological treatment
of the child; B. the right to represent the child in
legal action and to make other decisions
of substantial
legal significance concerning the child; C. the right to consent to marriage and to enlistment in the armed forces
of the United States; D. the right to make decisions concerning the child's education; E. the right to the services and earnings
of the child; F. except when a guardian
of the child's estate or a guardian or attorney ad litem has been appointed for the child, the right to act as an agent
of the child in relation to the child's estate if the child's action is required by a state, the United States, or a foreign government; G. the
duty to manage the estate
of the child to the
extent the estate has been created by community property or the joint property
of the parents.