Sentences with phrase «strongly arguable»

The judge went on to conclude that it was «strongly arguable» that from the time when the consent order was said to have been formed to the time when the wife was released from hospital she did not have the requisite mental capacity to enter into an agreement.
It seems to me strongly arguable that in the circumstances of a case such as this, where the employer discovers that the employee has been in serious breach of duty and in breach of good faith, and then discovers that the employee is tied effectively to a rival already... then the employer has, even if he keeps the contract alive, no obligation to provide work; that obligation to provide work being interdependent with the obligation of the employee to act loyally.»
The Court of Appeal found it «strongly arguable» that British Gas's conduct satisfied this test (Ferguson v British Gas Trading Ltd [2009] 3 All ER 304).
It may be proper for a judge (or his or her clerk) to check whether counsel have referred to all the relevant cases but, if they have not, and the judge finds one that he or she thinks may dispose of the issue, it is strongly arguable, whether the omission to cite the case is the fault of counsel or not, that the judge should call counsel back and invite them to address arguments to the court to deal with the new case.
In light of Schrems, I think it is strongly arguable that this reflects a failure on the parties / court's part to refer the correct question.
In Khrapunov v. JSC BTA Bank [2017] EWCA Civ 40, a unanimous Court of Appeal has ruled as strongly arguable a claim of a conspiracy to injure by unlawful means, where the unlawful means consist in a breach of a worldwide asset freezing order («WFO»).

Not exact matches

Both of Peele and Muschietti's powerhouses, strongly acted and written, are undeniably beneficial to the genre, but for serious fans, it's arguable whether either of them is by strict definition true horror.
It is arguable that banking is a public service or at least has a public service element, more people have bank accounts than telephones — and we are strongly encouraged by the government to use banking services.
In other cases, in an arguable violation of state «little anti-trust acts», there is a tie - in violation in which lawyer members of these mixed practice groups insist (or merely strongly encourage) clients to hire both legal counsels and these other professionals from the same advertising «roster» including all of them as «equal practitioners».
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