The judge opines that it's a stretch to accept the defendants» claim that the Hachette boss was talking about bookstores, not the other Publisher Defendants.
Not exact matches
After he was found guilty of some of the counts against him last months, he gave a press conference in which he declared victory — and then
opined on Twitter that the
judge would be unlikely to give him more than six months in prison.
(Joe Biden, surely qualified to
judge, later
opined that Obama had a «brain bigger than his skull.»)
Further he
opines that» [a] pronouncement of syncretism has been all too often a way of stopping conversation, of
judging the outcome without attending to the process.
The NYT
opines on the casino amendment wording, urging a
judge to rule that it should be restored to the more neutral language originally approved by the attorney general's office.
The Daily News's editorial board
opines U.S. District Court
Judge Kimba Wood gave too light a sentence to former Majority Leader Dean Skelos.
With Senate hearings on U.S. Supreme Court nominee John G. Roberts Jr. scheduled to begin Sept. 6, several education groups said last week that they were content to wait on
opining about whether the federal appellate
judge should become the high court's next associate justice.
So imagine your client's shock — and yours — when a pre-trial
judge ultimately
opined that this claim wasn't very strong at all...
Florida's Judicial Ethics Advisory Committee
opined back in 2009 that it was not permissible for a
judge to approve a lawyer who may appear before the
judge as a «friend» on a social networking site such as Facebook.
Dissenting
Judge Sajó
opined that the complaint should have been dismissed as incompatible ratione personae (opinion en partie dissidente du juge Sajó, p. 65).
Given this complexity, for lawyers and
judges to dare
opine that a certain search term or terms would be more likely to produce information than the terms that were used is truly to go where angels fear to tread.
Having decided as a matter of contract interpretation that the Luso mortgages are unambiguously excepted from coverage under Schedule B, we need not
opine whether the motion
judge was correct in concluding that Private Lending is also barred from recovery by an «Exclusions from Coverage» provision, which excludes from coverage loss or damage arising by reason of encumbrances, adverse claims, or other matters «created, suffered, assumed or agreed to by the insured claimant.»
«
Judge Kressel Puts an End to Legalese in His Court Main Another State
Opines on
Judges and Facebook»
On the other hand, in her concurring minority decision, Justice Feldman
opined that the trial
judge was in fact entitled to find that the Home Depot position was so substantially inferior to the managerial position Ms. Brake had held with PJ — M2R Restaurant Inc. that it should not be considered in mitigation.
I don't know if Slawyers ever heard the wonderful comedy sketch by the» 60's English group Beyond the Fringe (Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, Alan Bennett and Jonathan Miller) in which a coal miner bemoans his fate, and
opines: «Yes, I could have been a
Judge but I never had the Latin.
John Ruskin, the «leading English art critic of the Victorian era,» didn't simply
opine and
judge; he drew and painted as well.
While the C.A. recognized that the imposition of a constructive trust generally made the claimant the beneficial owner of the property, the trial
judge had appropriately crafted a narrower remedy (the C.A. also
opined that an irrevocable licence was also an appropriate remedy for proprietary estoppel).
On appeal, the Court overturned this decision,
opining that the Motion
Judge had erred in principle and his decision was not entitled to deference.
Judge Pooler further observes, «By employing the simple tactic of calling for an en banc poll, active
judges provide themselves with an opportunity to
opine on a case that was never before them.
When presented with the occasion to
opine on the compatibility of administrative tribunals with the entrenchment of judicial power in Labour Relations Board of Saskatchewan v. John East Iron Works, [vii] the position of the
judges was unequivocal: the Board's functions represented a «striking departure from the traditional conception of a court» [viii] and were designed instead to give effect to the «new conception of industrial relations», [ix] something that could only be achieved by technocrats familiar with the domain and qualified to «bring an experience and knowledge acquired extra-judicially to the solution of their problems».
The Ohio Supreme Court Board of Commissioners on Grievances and Discipline
opined that a
judge may «friend» attorneys as long as the
judge... Read More
The inappropriate musings of former justice Robin Camp, the donning of a «Make America great again» hat in court by another
judge, the unprecedented public attack on a
judge who
opined on the issue of drunkenness and consent or the recent casual «I like to sleep in my own bed» comment from the bench taken out of context have all fed an unsavoury and unfocused attack on the judiciary itself.
In response to a question from Rep. Greg Stumbo regarding the number of
judges in the Senior Judge program, Minton replied that until the end of the time period in which judges may elect to enter the Senior Judge program (Jan. 31, 2009) he will not know for sure, since judges don't have to declare their intention until January, but he opined that the number of active Senior Judges could reach 90 j
judges in the Senior
Judge program, Minton replied that until the end of the time period in which
judges may elect to enter the Senior Judge program (Jan. 31, 2009) he will not know for sure, since judges don't have to declare their intention until January, but he opined that the number of active Senior Judges could reach 90 j
judges may elect to enter the Senior
Judge program (Jan. 31, 2009) he will not know for sure, since
judges don't have to declare their intention until January, but he opined that the number of active Senior Judges could reach 90 j
judges don't have to declare their intention until January, but he
opined that the number of active Senior
Judges could reach 90 j
Judges could reach 90
judgesjudges.
Anticipating controversy, the PMO has asked former Justice Ian Binnie to
opine on the eligibility of a Federal Court of Appeal
Judge who had before appointment, practised for over a decade at the Barreau du Québec, to be appointed to one of the three «Québec seats» on the court under s. 6 of the Supreme Court Act..
This problem also applies to guardians ad litem, frequently a small group of lawyers or MHPs who are appointed by
judges and placed over and over again in the same local group of lawyers» cases, and who similarly
opine and write reports that sometimes are on the right side and sometimes on the wrong side.
Depending on the vagaries of the practice from time to time in this or that jurisdiction, parenting coordinators effectively have license to wield heavy authority and extremely biased power,
opining back to and influencing
judges, bringing issues into the public domain that do not belong there and which were not brought into the case by either party, siding with one party unfairly (even developing personal relationships with one of the parties), and recommending or just ordering the parents to hire the parenting coordinator's own cronies for therapies and guardianships and evaluations.
For example, some think the sum total of a custody case is something called «the psychological best interests of the child» [12] which aside from not being the custody decision - making standard in any state of the United States, is itself an undefined concept; others have
opined that they are «the child's voice» [13a] or the «eyes and ears» of the
judge [13b]; and others behave as if rather than being just another witness in a case, they are tantamount to being the de facto
judge (the court, by calling them in, presumably having admitted to incompetence beyond uttering administrative orders for their benefit at the parties» expense, and handling case minutiae.)