Sentences with phrase «multiple rulings by this court»

Not exact matches

«The Movants have had ample opportunity to intervene in the multiple cases challenging the so - called «Fiduciary Rule» in district courts around the country, in appeals in two other circuits courts, and in this appeal, which was decided by this Court more than a month ago,» the filing said.
But GOP lawmakers insisted that multiple U.S. Supreme Court and lower federal court decisions have already ruled that political contributions and political spending are a form of free speech and can't be limited by the stCourt and lower federal court decisions have already ruled that political contributions and political spending are a form of free speech and can't be limited by the stcourt decisions have already ruled that political contributions and political spending are a form of free speech and can't be limited by the states.
The Court's ruling was criticized by multiple top city officials, as well as leading local immigration reform groups.
The LSUC's rules; what to do when acting for multiple parties; grounds for termination by the lawyer; the importance of retainer agreements; getting off the record in court; solicitors» liens and how to get paid.
Relying on the advice of the Corporation's legal counsel, the Board proposed amending its rules to «broaden the definition of «single family» accepted by the Ontario Court of Appeal, while at the same time, making it clear that multiple, unrelated, transient tenants did not fall within the expanded definition» and to grandfather all existing occupancies that did not fall within that broader definition.
The Times newspaper took a case to the European Court of Human Rights arguing that the multiple publication rule was so onerous a burden for newspapers in the internet age that it had a «chilling effect» on their right to free speech, as guaranteed by the European Convention on Human Rights, which the Court enforces.
Some solutions proposed are: rationing of judicial time for example by assigning a fixed number of motions to each proceeding; charging higher filing fees for additional motions; penalizing obstructionist conduct through multiples of indemnification costs; awarding priority dates to well - run litigation; more motions in writing; higher filing costs for longer hearings; more aggressive use by the Bench of rules that permit judges to control the court process such as time limits for evidence in chief and cross, and some outsourcing of judicative functions.
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