Sentences with phrase «strict legal sense»

In a strict legal sense, the likely answer is no.

Not exact matches

Protests of this nature don't constitute a legal strike for unionized workers, and the concept of striking in the strict sense doesn't exist for non-union workers.
Possible legal theories that can be argued in a products liability case include negligence (lack of reasonable care in the manufacture or sale of the product or in warning about the product), breach of warranty (failure to fulfill the terms of a promise regarding the product's performance), misrepresentation (giving consumers a false sense of security about a product's safety), and strict liability (under which the product's defect, although not the fault of the defendant, rendered the product unreasonably dangerous and the defendant is therefore responsible).
This is a «policy» or more precisely a polical decision, not a legal one in the strictest sense of the word.
The study of law is (strict legal formalism aside) the study of the history of politics, in the broad sense of that word.
Things like how an LLC versus Corporate setup affects deductions and how land ownership of trusts can complicate Farm Service Agency (FSA) payments are issues that are outside of legal expertise in the strictest sense.
The House of Lords expressly rejected any requirement that the communication must itself contain «legal advice», in any strict sense of that phrase.
Declarations adopted in the Summit of the Americas process do not have the nature of norms of international law in the strict sense, although, according to Sanahuja, they would fall within the scope of the so - called soft law, without direct legal effects but with visible influence on policies and domestic legislation.
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