Sentences with phrase «if statutory bodies»

Sedley LJ agreed and was also concerned that if statutory bodies like the Trust could challenge their own commercial agreements too readily, so could any party with a sufficient interest, and the net result would be to undermine the autonomy of the public bodies and encourage litigation.

Not exact matches

You shall not be bound by the provisions of confidentiality contained in this Agreement if such Holdings Information 1) is or becomes publicly known through no act or omission of the Financial Institution, its employees, agents or subcontractors; 2) is lawfully disclosed to you by a third party without restriction and without any obligation of confidentiality; 3) is required to be disclosed by any Governmental body, regulatory body (including without limitation any relevant securities exchange) or court of competent jurisdiction or otherwise pursuant to any statutory or regulatory obligation.
It added, «INEC as a statutory body has the full complements of technical hands in its legal department to advice it appropriately and we wonder why it had to wait for directives from the AGF, an external party, if not for partisan and subjective interest.
Karakatsanis J. points to multiple features of the elaborate statutory scheme that might be said to support the alternative interpretation and explains how each of them is nonetheless consistent with the Board's interpretation (if one can call it that), much of which is supported by reference to a decision made by another body that «formerly» had appellate jurisdiction from the Board (at para. 44).
If a national body is a statutory arm of government, it must be funded by government.
If it were established as a statutory body, the National Indigenous Representative Body would have a direct reporting relationship with Parliament through its annual repbody, the National Indigenous Representative Body would have a direct reporting relationship with Parliament through its annual repBody would have a direct reporting relationship with Parliament through its annual report.
On the public confidence aspect, if, as has been the case here, the Commonwealth parliament sees fit to devolve certain responsibilities of a statutory nature upon representative bodies, the public has a right to ensure that those bodies can carry out those duties to the high standards expected of them.
If the Body was a statutory authority it would have to rely on Parliament to approve such changes and may also have unnecessary or politically motivated changes foisted upon it.
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