Sentences with phrase «precedent when»

Your agents will look to you to set the precedent when it comes to sharing content or information with the public.
The fact that CMAs (AAMA) are specifically mentioned in the statutes and / or regulations of certain states provides helpful precedent when advocating for medical assisting right to practice issues.
The bank asked that their appeal be heard because the issue of whether lenders who become owners of residential premises through a judicial process such as foreclosure are responsible for tenants» security deposits arises quite often and the RTDRS therefore had need of a precedent when faced with similar situations in the future.
Some state rules will waive extrinsic evidence as a condition precedent when business records are accompanied by an affidavit.
So, will this discussion of precedents serve as a precedent when the Court considers overturning precedents in the future, so to speak?
I believe that there is precedent when an entrenched religion, as climate change has become, requires a reformation and provides a pathway for implementing reforms.
I think this entire situation sets a dangerous precedent when newspapers can augment important photos in order to not offend their readership.
The only rationale I can discern for the bailout is as a cynical political manoeuvre by Chris Grayling, a hard - right Brexiteer, to avoid following my 2009 precedent when National Express defaulted on its obligations to the state for the same East Coast franchise because it too had overbid for the contract.
We find it to be very strangling because we, unfortunately, have a precedent when that happens, the only organization that is targeted is the Catholic church.»
However, as you'll recall, former Sen. Hiram Monserrate's colleagues set a precedent when they expelled him in the wake of his conviction on a misdemeaor charge of assaulting his girlfriend.
In the same way that a Judge must follow precedent when considering a judgement.
The majority responded that the Dissenters» refusal to follow precedents when they disagree with them «makes it difficult to engage in additional meaningful debate.»
Carpenter had his own precedents when he made Assault.
It's unlikely that they will simply ignore those precedents when trying to regulate ICOs, so I wouldn't lose hope just yet.

Not exact matches

They're usually 30 to 50 years behind what is commonplace, but that's what happens when you have a legal system based on precedent.
«The last precedent we had for this kind of move in rates was in 2013 during the so - called Taper Tantrum, when rates went from 1.66 percent to 3.25 percent in four months,» Miller said.
When asked about the SaaS sector in the country and the startup scenario, from a fundraising viewpoint, Subramanian stated that ventures like Freshworks (backed by Google Ventures) and BrowserStack (Secured $ 50 Million from Accel) have set precedents in terms of raising the bar for fundraising in India.
Legal precedent, meanwhile, tends to define sexual harassment as occurring either when a supervisor requests sex in exchange for a subordinate being promoted or not being fired, or when an employee is subject to behavior of a sexual nature that's so pervasive it creates a hostile work environment.
«Creating a precedent with audiences so that they know exactly what they're going to get when they see your content gives them a reason to crave your brand and what makes it different.»
However, this is family time, and it's setting a dangerous precedent to take calls when you're «out of the office.»
To find a relevant precedent, one has to go back to 1994, when the Fed raised rates by 25 bps despite the market assigning only about a 30 percent chance (around what is expected now) of a tightening.
At the surface, when we look at valuation measures and other fundamentals and compare them to historical precedents, there is a case to be made that stocks (in particular in the US) are above fair value, if not rich.
But the decision could be used as a non-binding precedent in future cases, meaning judges in other courts could rely on it or ignore it when similar cases cross their desk.
From a historical standpoint, however, when the equity market has joined persistent overvalued, overbought, overbullish extremes with deteriorating market internals, with a cherry on top featuring two - tiered speculation in glamour stocks and heavy new issuance of stock by companies that predominantly have no earnings, we find it difficult to find any precedent that hasn't worked out quite badly.
Assuming — hoping — that yesterday's Boston Marathon bombing is not followed by a string of similar attacks, the most apt precedent might be the July 7, 2005, blasts in London, when three trains and a bus were targeted, 52 victims were killed and 700 were injured.
Parenthetically, you were no doubt as surprised as Yellen when her tenure as chairwoman was, without recent precedent, terminated by Pres. Donald Trump after just one term.
Rosenstein was asked about investigations that go on for months or even years; if there is a precedent on how long an investigation should last and when would the American people get to know the results of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election that has been underway since May of 2017.
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.
I'm speaking of the Mueller investigation — is there a precedent or is there something that puts a time limit on this — when the Americans will get to know what he's discovered?»
When Paula Jones sued Bill Clinton for sexual harassment 20 years ago, the Supreme Court set the precedent that a sitting president can't push off a federal case until after he leaves office.
If Apple is forced to break its own security to get into one phone in this specific case, a precedent is set, and then the question is where and when can that precedent be used again and again, which begs the question as to whether we will ever have privacy again in our ever increasing digital world?
This legal precedent established a wide scope of discretion in which trustees could operate when constructing and managing portfolios.
This MSN resource profiles important precedents between 2006 and 2017 where apparel brands provided compensation to workers when one of their supplier factories was closed and when the supplier failed to pay workers their severance and other lawful benefits.
I will leave a fuller defense of Edmund Burke to Yuval Levin, who is an expert on the subject, but Marr badly mischaracterizes Burke as a kind of Deweyan pragmatist and experimentalist, when in fact Burke believed in the authority of tradition and precedent, in a predisposition toward reverence for the past, in the notion of God - given rights, and in the necessity of transcendental beliefs and institutions as a grounding for political society.
Clearly, there is biblical precedent for calling people out when they use the name of God to cover their own selfish or malicious intentions.)
One can find a scriptural precedent for the development of doctrine in Christ's claim that «when the Spirit of truth comes he will lead you to the complete truth.»
But we don't need precedents or precepts from hagiography, since the Lord himself instructs us when we pray to say Abba, Father.
In the Synoptics, for example, faith is the precedent condition of Jesus» miracles while in the Fourth Gospel faith is the consequence of Jesus» miracles — «Believe me for the very works» sake»; (John 14:11) «Though ye believe not me, believe the works»; (John 10:38) he «manifested his glory; and his disciples believed on him,» after his first miracle; (John 2:11) and, when a nobleman's son was healed, he «himself believed, and his whole house.»
Sexton said: «Certainly when cases are decided like this, they may set a precedent for future cases.
Yes, when appropriate, bring up historical precedents.
when islamic armies defeated spain in 711 a.d. they later tore down st. vincent's church and built the cordoba mosque to signify the islamic supremecy over christianity; historical precedent had already been set forth.
This rewriting of the record plainly comes from a late period, when opposition to the enslavement of fellow Hebrews had won its way to general recognition and when it seemed desirable to expunge from the historical record a precedent so dangerous as Solomon's example would provide.
Thus, when the Court in Casey asks that its case law be given the obedience due to the Constitution, and when it insists that, above all, it must remain loyal to its own recently established precedents, it makes a reasonable request within the context of the new constitutional regime.
Certainly ecclesiastical precedent places a greater emphasis upon the latter considerations when the accused is close to death, as Fr Murphy was known to be.
When the Anglican patristic scholar and Church historian Trevor Jalland concluded his Bampton Lectures at Oxford in 1942 (published in 1944 as The Church and the Papacy: A Historical Study), he spoke of the Roman Church as having «in its long and remarkable history a supernatural grandeur which no mere secular institution has ever attained in equal measure,» and went on to refer to «its strange, almost mystical, faithfulness to type, its marked degree of changelessness, its steadfast clinging to tradition and to precedent
One such precedent occurred in 2015, when a California judge ruled in favor of Trader Joe's after the grocery chain was sued over the use of the word «milk» on its nondairy soymilk product.
Competition policy (SME focus; need for equity; treat SMEs as «consumers» when dealing with larger businesses - extend unfair terms contracts to small business; need «legal precedents or statutory definitions» as part of unconscionable conduct framework); competition laws (focus on unfair terms and unconscionable behaviour; mention of MMP but not in context of s 46; access - call for broader access; price signalling (not clear)-RRB-; administration
Probably when he kicked out at Ox... Surely after the early precedent a kick - out is a straight red??
Based on this recent precedent and the increasing value placed on starting quarterbacks, it was hardly surprising when Andrew Luck signed a six - year, $ 140 million contract.
Now, as you might expect, there are few hurdles to jump through when it comes to turning a race car into a road car, but thankfully for Roddario, there was a precedent.
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