Sentences with phrase «inflicted bodily harm»

However, the court found that the bankrupt had not intentionally inflicted bodily harm on the victim: Marshall, Re, 2001 CanLII 28287 (ON SC).
Inflict bodily harm on another person and you will suffer the same harm.
After five years, she's capable of inflicting bodily harm on her creators and show signs of deep hatred.
Ryan plays this proud, beleaguered, supposedly over-the-hill fighter with dignity rather than sentimentality, with realism rather than melodrama, and with an intimate knowledge of the ways men can inflict bodily harm on each other for money.
Stability control casts its safety net creepily late, and full - throttle upshifts threaten to inflict bodily harm.
However, just as people can resolve disagreements without resorting to physical violence and inflicting bodily harm, dogs can do likewise.
Young children for whom the ABI: SE Approach is NOT appropriate are those who have serious social emotional or behavioral problems such as children with autism or psychiatric disorders, or those who commit serious acts of aggression (e.g., setting fires, inflicting bodily harm).
His family members have told me that if he knew I was ever in the area, he would stalk me to inflict bodily harm.

Not exact matches

The most troubling aspect of Tracy Morgan's remarks is the bodily harm he said he'd inflict on his own child if he were to be seen acting in an effeminate manner.
According to the 1951 convention, genocide involves an intention to wipe out a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group by killing, causing serious bodily or mental harm, inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about the group's physical destruction, preventing births, and forcibly transferring children to another people group.
It is defined in Article 2 of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (CPPCG) as «any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the groups conditions of life, calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; [and] forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.»
Psychiatrist John Gill has been charged by the state of New South Wales with manslaughter and maliciously inflicting grievous bodily harm.
If piperine inhibits the liver from getting rid of foreign substances by making them water soluble (as mentioned here: http://nutritionfacts.org/video/boosting-the-bioavailability-of-curcumin/), then would the coumarin be more or less likely to inflict liver damage or other bodily harm?
Or it will veer into three - hanky melodrama and inflict distress or bodily harm on a character you're surprised to realize you've grown to like.
And Edlyn Joy Hauser, the woman whose dog, Benjamin, attacked animal control officer Crowell, has pleaded innocent to three felony counts of assault with a deadly weapon — Benjamin — and intentionally inflicting great bodily harm.
There are numerous twists and exceptions to the castle rule depending on the state (e.g., in some states the intruder must intend to inflict serious bodily harm while in others it is enough that the intruder intends to commit some felony such as arson or burglary; in other states the occupant of the home must not have provoked the intrusion, etc.).
Willfully inflict (or attempt to inflict) unjustifiable physical and / or mental suffering under circumstances likely to produce great bodily harm or death;
It must be observed that this requires the unlawful and malicious administration of a poison or a noxious thing, with intent to endanger the life of a person, or to inflict grievous bodily harm.
R v AJ: Represented a client charged with kidnap, false imprisonment, robbery and inflicting grevious bodily harm with intent with a positive assessment for dangerousness.
For example, an order of discharge does not release a bankrupt person from any debt arising from an award of damages by a court in civil proceedings stemming from «bodily harm intentionally inflicted, or sexual assault»:
This would include using physical force to stop their flight and return your property to your possession: it would not include force that posed real and foreseeable risk of inflicting death or grievous bodily harm upon them.
Under this law — California Penal Code § 206 — the crime of torture occurs when a person inflicts great bodily harm on another with the intent to cause cruel or extreme pain.
In Welch, the Ontario Court of Appeal rejected the defence argument of consensual sado - masochistic (SM) sex, holding that in the sexual assault context, «a victim can not consent to the infliction of bodily harm upon himself or herself... unless the accused is acting in the course of a generally approved social purpose when inflicting the harm
The plaintiff brought a motion to lift the stay and for declarations that the stay did not operate with respect to enforcement of judgment, that the judgment was an award of damages for bodily harm intentionally inflicted pursuant to s. 178 (1)(a. 1) of the BIA, and that the judgment survived bankruptcy and was not a debt released by order of discharge.
It did so on the basis that the plaintiff was required only to demonstrate «bodily harm intentionally inflicted».
The Ontario Court of Appeal recently weighed in on the «bodily harm intentionally inflicted» portion of s. 178 (1)(a. 1)(i) in Dickerson v. 1610396 Ontario Inc. (2013 ONCA 653).
(b) The right to security of person and protection by the State against violence or bodily harm, whether inflicted by government officials or by any individual group or institution
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