Sentences with phrase «precedent do»

The rules of precedent don't cease to apply (as far as I know) to the decisions of a judge recommended to be removed for misconduct.
Without historical precedent we don't know how it's going to pan out.
In this age of technological innovation and disruption, precedent doesn't mean as much as it used to.
To speak absolutely strictly, precedent does not exist.»
The issue here, IMHO, is that the pre-Smith precedent doesn't directly speak to for - profit corporations, but it does speak favorably to for - profit organizations bringing a free exercise claim (i.e. Braunfeld).
Anglo - Soviet invasion of Iran comes to mind when Allies invaded Iran to secure a route to supply Soviets against the rapidly advancing Germans so historical precedent does exist although from times before UN.
Whatever else that legal precedent does, it probably doesn't entitle authorities to do fishing expeditions away from borders.
The U.S. District Court Judge decision missed the main point of the lawsuit, that the unfavorable Georgia ballot access precedents do not relate to presidential elections.
And natural cycle precedents do not exhibit the same extreme changes we're now witnessing.
However, the recent New Mexico Supreme Court Blakely ruling (basics here) asserts that the Apprendi - Blakely - Booker line of cases «ought not be viewed as drawing a bright line,» and the California Supreme Court's summer ruling on Blakely (basics here, commentary here and here) likewise asserts that the «high court's precedents do not draw a bright line.»
However, even this precedent does not fully explain the high costs award in Voisey.
Legal precedents do not have the same influence in China as they do in many developed nations.
Acknowledging that few courts had addressed the issue, and looking to what little precedent did exist, the court held that a violation of the cited provision of RESPA requires the involvement of a third party.

Not exact matches

Investment environments are constantly shifting, so the question must be asked: Does historical precedent even matter in this situation?
«The field is always evolving and changing and is relatively new, so there's no real established precedent for many of the things we do in social media,» she told The Drum.
They don't work within traditional boundaries or allow themselves to be confined by precedent.
While no party in the modern era has officially turned against their incumbent, it does not take a wild leap of the imagination to believe that President Trump could break with precedent.
«A ruling by a single judge in one circuit can not and does not undo the years of clear legal precedent nationwide establishing that transgender students have the right to go to school without being singled out for discrimination,» said a statement from five groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), that have filed «friend of the court» briefs on behalf of transgender students.
«Even if the current minimum wage increase proposals don't affect your company, it sets a bad precedent,» Merrill Matthews a resident scholar at the Institute for Policy Innovation in Dallas wrote in a recent article for NCMM.
He said the agreements still occurred in context of native law and Aboriginal cultural heritage considerations and smaller mining companies did not need to fear the risk of setting a precedent.
But Kasich did sign into law a measure banning abortions after 20 weeks — another controversial regulation that could potentially brush up against previous court rulings, even though Kasich cited Supreme Court precedent for his veto of the «heartbeat» legislation.
If you set the precedent early that you're willing to do more than what they're paying for (because you want to please them, after all), they'll continue to push that.
«You can hate WikiLeaks all you want, but if they're prosecuted, that precedent can be turned around and used on all the reporters you do like.»
But there is precedent for Apple trying lower - cost options, which means there's always a possibility they'll do it again.
There is precedent for this: Amazon didn't start breaking out AWS - only numbers until 2015, nine years into its existence.
But while the announcement is no - doubt shocking (as Police Chief Bill Blair remarked, «We have no historical precedent for doing that in Ontario), it comes on the heels of a similar move in numerous U.S. cities, where the axe has already fallen on those previously considered to be untouchable.
Mueller does have enough evidence to indict Trump but may decide he does not have the authority to charge the president based on Department of Justice precedent.
While Citizens United seems to allow more unrestrained political speech — and some legal experts warn such activities may wind up in court because a precedent has yet to be set — that doesn't mean your organization should go ahead and do it.
Obama also said Senate Republicans are setting a dangerous precedent if they do not consider Garland
«Panther» will end up over $ 600 million in foreign grosses and set precedent in destroying the truism that films starring mostly black characters do not perform well internationally, particularly in Asia.
«I don't think there's any precedent in the law for a security to transform to be something else,» Gensler told an audience at the MIT Technology Review's Business of Blockchain Conference last week.
If the Senate overruled MacDonough and allowed these provisions to sneak through under reconciliation, then that sets the precedent for future Senates to do the same thing.
There is precedent for central banks offering credit to individuals, and infinite maturity loans with no interest don't have credit risk, so there is no need for collateral or government indemnity.
The historical lesson here is fairly unambiguous, although as always it is disappointing that economists who do propose such a solution for China evince so little curiosity about the historical precedents.
First, it doesn't seem to conform to historical precedents, most especially American historical precedents, that suggest trade intervention has indeed been a successful part of many countries» growth strategies.
Dan Lyons, an author who was briefly a Valleywag writer, said what Mr. Thiel did «sets a scary precedent,» but «my guess is that most people hate Gawker as much as he does, so he probably ends up looking like a hero among his own crowd.»
This wasn't a binding precedent and doesn't apply to any other drivers, but it jumpstarted ample media coverage of the worker classification issue with startups.
Clearly, the last of these four is the optimal response, but Beijing has been trying unsuccessfully to do this for nearly ten years, and neither the arithmetic nor the historical precedents give observers much hope that this can be done to any serious extent without a radical transformation of the country's development model.
This is a good year to throw precedent out the window, so I don't imagine that Three Billboards» lack of a Best Director nomination hurts it any more than the relatively low number of nominations for Get Out or Lady Bird hurt them, or Dunkirk's lack of acting or writing nominations hurts it.
They said Ross» investigation didn't provide evidence that imported steel is a risk to U.S. national security and warned that his recommendations set a dangerous precedent.
And because the issue of LLC ownership by IRA has no legal precedent, companies advertising home storage of IRA gold are careful to note that they don't provide legal advice, the Journal writes.
In November 2017, he achieved precedent - setting victories for investors, when the Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that direct evidence of price impact is not always necessary to demonstrate market efficiency to invoke the presumption of reliance, and that defendants seeking to rebut the presumption of reliance must do so by a preponderance of the evidence rather than merely meeting a burden of production.
Don't get me wrong, it's helping to maintain growth, but acceleration anywhere even close to historical precedent has remained elusive for the entirety of the current cycle.
The people do not speak in the language of the law; they do not talk of texts, precedents, doctrine, multi-pronged tests, or the balancing of factors.
What proved to be the greatest enemy of a traditional approach to the Constitution wasn't just bad precedent, but the experience of moral change: that is, the feeling of one generation that it occupied a different moral universe than did previous generations.
While Apple maintains that helping the FBI access the San Bernardino shooter's iPhone would set a dangerous precedent, Bill Gates told the Financial Times that he doesn't quite see it that way:
I don't trust politicians of any cloth, and a precedent has been set.
TruthPrevails, it does seem that far to many Christians don't realize that one day they may not be in the majority, and that by trying to encode their beliefs into law they are setting a precedent that may be used against them in the future.
But we don't need precedents or precepts from hagiography, since the Lord himself instructs us when we pray to say Abba, Father.
If the Obama administration gets away with forcing Catholic institutions to step across lines of life and death in the name of «health,» the federal government will have a precedent to legislate Judaism out of existence» as several other countries have already tried to do.
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