Sentences with phrase «to be subject to appeal»

«The decision of the arbitrators shall be subject to appeal in accordance with the provisions of the Arbitration Act, 1991, S.O. 1991, c. 17 as amended, or any successor Act.»
That decision is subject to an appeal at the suit of Huawei, the hearing of which will take place next month.
The Court said that tribunals should be granted deference not that they shouldn't be subject to any review at all, they did not come close to questioning whether the issue should have been subject to appeal at the Queen's bench level.
But of the four convictions, at least two are subject to appeal following fresh evidence when when the lead SFO expert witness admitted under cross-examination that he had been texting questions on technical points from the courtroom.
«As the case is subject to appeal, the University of Sheffield will not comment on this case at this time.»
The letters, sent Friday over the names of six commissioners, are subject to appeal within 15 business days.
@Brythan I believe the presiding officer still does make the selection of who speaks in either house, just in the senate any decision by the presiding officer is subject to appeal by the whole senate and in that case the majority party would assert their dominance.
While environmental campaigners hailed this as a major victory, the threat of an appeal has been looming in the background ever since; councillors were advised at the time that their rulings would likely be subject to appeal.
Where a tribunal is insufficiently alert to its responsibility in ensuring that such a litigant is properly informed of their rights to rectify certain procedural deficiencies on their part, the tribunal's decision might be subject to an appeal based on a denial of procedural fairness.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the Tribunal issues a decision which is subject to appeal to the Queen's Bench.
«The decision of the arbitrators shall be subject to appeal in accordance with the provisions of The Arbitrations Act, R.S.O. 1970, as amended, or any successor Act.»
But of the four convictions, at least two are subject to appeal following fresh evidence at the Contouglas / Reich re-trial.
In 2012, the Tribunal de Grande Instance of Paris recognised and enforced the Award (a decision upheld on appeal) whilst conversely the Amsterdam District Court refused enforcement (though that decision is subject to appeal).
Figures released by the Department for Education this morning show the number of key stage 2 tests that were subject to an appeal has increased this year to 1.9 per cent.
Just 1 per cent of tests (5,174) were subject to appeal in 2014.
These are subject to appeal, not burglary.
Of the four UK convictions, at least two are subject to appeal.
However, if it stands, the decision in this case is yet likely to be subject to appeal.
In doing so, it analyses those parts of the Court of Appeal judgment which are most likely to be subject to appeal.
Furthermore, in his dissent, Justice Alito suggested that issues relating to the PTAB's jurisdiction also may be subject to appeal.
A settlement council took decisions in the first instance, but these were subject to appeal to the Tribunal.
Furthermore, in his dissent in Cuozzo, Justice Alito suggested that issues relating to the PTAB's jurisdiction also may be subject to appeal.
determinations, awards, orders and other decisions of the Tribunal (including decisions as to whether they have jurisdiction) shall not be subject to appeal or be liable to be questioned in any court.
Paul Whittell partner at law firm Berrymans Lace Mawer, which is advising CBC, says: «We believe that the judgment has a number of flaws which will be subject to appeal, the most serious being forseeability — the council can not be held responsible unless it had foresight that there could be injury to birth mothers.
Even where a determination is made, it is subject to appeal, or comes at the end of a long and frustrating journey.
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