Sentences with phrase «stricter laws designed»

Opponents of legal weed in Oregon say they would take their fight to the Oregon legislature, pushing for stricter laws designed to limit access to pot by children, among other efforts.

Not exact matches

Auroracoin's mysterious founder says the initiative is designed to bypass the strict money laws in Iceland that, he says, have «stifled economic growth».
North Carolina has very strict title loan laws, all of which are designed to keep borrowers safe, which is a good thing.
The allegations include breach of implied and express warranty, consumer and common law fraud, unjust enrichment, negligence, and strict products liability with defective design or manufacture and failure to warn.
Brand new expansive crosswalks, pedestrian islands, better urban design, and stricter traffic law enforcement.
A strict new copyright law will ensure extra protection for artists and designers from those attempting to rip off their designs, says Tayside solicitors and property agents Miller Hendry.
The amicus brief argues that the notion that an infringer's entire profit (on an infringing article) should be recoverable goes back to the 19th century, when only knowing infringement resulted in liability, while «even independent designers are [under today's strict liability regime] on the hook for patent infringement in modern design patent law».
Claimants have utilized the laws of strict liability, design defect and failure to warn to support their cases.
When the negligence is in relation to product design or manufacturing or a failure to warn appropriately, the area of law that applies is called defective products, product liability or strict products liability.
Attorneys for both plaintiffs and defendants will find comprehensive coverage of such matters as: the advantages and disadvantages of suits based on strict liability, negligence and breach of warranty; the use of state consumer protection statutes; the duty to warn and its innumerable ramifications; the liability of the manufacturers, retailers and other potential defendants in the distribution chain; successor liability; federal preemption of common law claims; monitoring product safety during design, manufacturing and distribution; causation theories in actions involving multiple manufacturers; product misuse and alteration; the elements of proof needed in an action; recovery for economic loss; punitive damages; and the government contractor defense.
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