The Landesa Center for Women's Land Rights» LandWise database seems to have
the same civil codes as WIPO Lex, so you can check there as well.
Not exact matches
... Don't forget that these
same household
codes were used by many Americans during the
Civil War era to justify their owning of slaves.
Lancman argues that the offense should be treated the
same as a
civil code violation and not a criminal offense.
Yeah, the fucking bastards, damn the International
Civil Aviation Organization for ensuring aircraft can communicate in the countries they travel between and don't collide, curse the International Maritime Organization for allowing the
same benefits to ships and assisting navigation at sea, screw the Universal Postal Union for ensuring that post can be sent between countries and reach it's destination okay and fuck the International Telecommunication Union for assigning things like country
codes so that people in different countries don't have different numbers making international phone systems incompatible.
It is interesting to note that a major new doctrinal work should appear in the market at the
same time as LEXUM launches its populist digital annotated version of the Quebec
Civil Code.
As to the use of experts in electronic records management, it is not yet the practice of lawyers to use such experts, but it should be because the Evidence Acts require it in order to use electronic records as evidence — e.g. s. 31.2 (1)(a) of the Canada Evidence Act, and, s. 34.1 (5), (5.1) of the Ontario Evidence Act, and the Evidence Acts of 9 other jurisdictions in Canada contain the
same requirement (including the records provisions of Book 7 of the
Civil Code of Quebec).
While enforcement, a foreign arbitral award shall, on the application being made to the appropriate court by any party, be enforced by execution by the court under the
Code of
Civil Procedure 1908, in the
same manner as if it were a decree of the domestic Court.
On Friday, January 25, 2013, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in a tight majority judgment (five: McLachlin, Deschamps, Abella, Cromwell and Karakatsanis, against four: LeBel, Fish, Rothstein and Moldaver) that the Quebec
Civil Code discriminates against common - law spouses because it does not grant them the
same rights as married couples in regard to spousal support and division of property.
But is a Consent Decree entered by the Court the
same as a contract, and is a proceeding to enforce a fee provision in a Consent Decree an «action on a contract» triggering recovery of attorney's fees under
Civil Code section 1717 rules and standards?
Section 13 of the
Civil Procedure
Code (1908)(«CPC») provides that a foreign judgment shall be conclusive as to any matter thereby directly adjudicated upon between the
same parties, or between parties under whom they or any of them claim, litigating under the
same title, except:
After a prior appeal in this
same case, the plaintiff sought to recover prejudg ement and appellate attorney fees under
Civil Code section 1717 (attorney fees provided by contract).
On November 3, 2010, Quebec's Court of Appeal ruled that the province's
Civil Code does indeed discriminate against common - law spouses by denying them the
same recourse to alimony as those who are married.
Civil partners are treated in the
same way as spouses under the tax and social welfare
codes.
In the event the respondent named in any complaint alleging a violation of the
Code of Ethics is involved in
civil litigation or in any proceeding before the state real estate licensing authority or any other state or federal regulatory or administrative agency in a matter arising out of the
same facts and circumstances giving rise to the complaint alleging unethical conduct, the complaint may, at the discretion of the Grievance Committee, or on appeal, at the discretion of the Board of Directors, proceed to a hearing before a Hearing Panel of the Board's Professional Standards Committee.