Sentences with phrase «very large numbers of cases»

Cases took years to come to court and very large numbers of cases went all the way through the system before collapsing into settlement at the door of the court.
«Here we have a real opportunity to generalize from a very large number of cases
The article further commented that «it could (but should not) be used tactically to prevent claimants starting proceedings for nine months or more... it could make proceedings unnecessary in a very large number of cases».
Since then, there have been a very large number of cases where the Board has either declined to dismiss on the basis of the reasoning in Investia, or has noted the reasoning in Investia but found it unnecessary to decide the point because the case could be dismissed on other grounds.
Now it's entirely likely that Ravel and other parties have gone back and stripped a very large number of those cases of their West annotations, thus freeing them from copyright constraints.
Finally, «there are likely to be, over the long term, challenges to the interpretation of EU - derived laws that remain part of EU law including claims that we should depart from existing jurisprudence and that we should make up our own jurisprudence in relation to matters that come up later, and that could be a very large number of cases,» Lady Hale said.

Not exact matches

You can reduce the risk by only trading with reputable dealers but there have been a large number of cases where very reputable dealers have sold fake art, antiques etc..
The book contains a large number of individual case histories making this theory of mind very vivid.
I think it's a very important point to be made here: that we're seeing the consequences of very large numbers of blows to the head coming from, in our particular case, two contact practices a week, each lasting two to three hours, plus a game every week.
The authors note that the prevalence of «pit bull - type dogs» in «the... number of cases that resulted in very severe injuries or fatalities» may be accounted for in large part because of «the popularity of the breed in the victim's community, reporting biases and the dog's treatment by its owner (e.g., use as fighting dogs — note 21).»
There are a very large number of diseases of dogs that can give test results identical to that seen in cases of leptospirosis.
With a very large database for the Labrador, there was a sufficient number of dogs with these data to restrict the analyses to cases for which the age at time of neutering was available from the record system.
Even small changes in relative risk can be quite substantial for diseases like malaria that kills over 1,600 per million and diarrhea that kills over 1,000 / million population — and yes, mostly children; therefore in this case even a small or «marginal» risk translates to a potentially very large number of additional deaths over baseline; this is how confusion between «relative» vs. «attributable» risk can be misleading.
This problem is reduced if a very large number of samples are available, but when this is not the case, rather than rely on the averaging process to cancel non-common growth signals it could be argued that it is more efficient to remove clearly «anomalous» data from the sample.
Given the consequent threat to life for very large numbers of people of failing to respect the 2.0 C threshold, I've yet to see the case for treating those seriously proposing a carbon budget giving a mere 66 % chance of doing so with anything like respect.
In any case, it is simply an effort to reconcile the rapid rates of warming in the Arctic with the output of the most recent group of global climate models — everyone agrees that global warming is real, except for a very large number of editors and reporters with the U.S. press, who continue to advocate for the positions held by a small number of fossil fuel funded contrarians and insist on giving them «equal time» — a luxury denied to renewable energy experts.
On the other side, associations such as the Society of Clinical Injury Lawyers contend that it is the NHS LA itself which causes the increases — stating that a large number of cases are needlessly drawn out by the NHS LA, only to be paid out at a very late stage.
Even a very incomplete list gives an impression of the large number of significant opinions he has written: seminal administrative law cases such as Chevron v. NRDC and Massachusetts v. EPA, the intellectual property case Sony Corp v. Universal City Studios (which made clear that making individual videotapes of television programs did not constitute copyright infringement), important war on terror precedents such as Rasul v. Bush and Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, important criminal law cases such as Padilla v. Kentucky (holding that defense counsel must inform the defendant if a guilty plea carries a risk of deportation) and Atkins v. Virginia (which reversed precedent to hold it was unconstitutional to impose capital punishment on the mentally retarded), and of course Apprendi v. New Jersey (which revolutionized criminal sentencing by holding that the Sixth Amendment right to jury trial prohibited judges from enhancing criminal sentences beyond statutory maximums based on facts other than those decided by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt).
Since then he has advised and represented clients in court, and particularly latterly in mediation, in a very large number of commercial disputes cases.
It is clear that in any case where the decision may affect large numbers of disabled people, the necessary due regard to the needs of disabled people under the public sector equality duty is very high.
However the case of Tapere and a limited number of other tribunal decisions (see, for example, Royden and ors v Barnetts Solicitors Liverpool ET Case no. 2103451 / 07) demonstrate the very real potential for large numbers of claims being brought by employees not prepared to move after a transcase of Tapere and a limited number of other tribunal decisions (see, for example, Royden and ors v Barnetts Solicitors Liverpool ET Case no. 2103451 / 07) demonstrate the very real potential for large numbers of claims being brought by employees not prepared to move after a transCase no. 2103451 / 07) demonstrate the very real potential for large numbers of claims being brought by employees not prepared to move after a transfer.
Acting for key market players, our dedicated teams have broad experience ranging from handling the very high value, more complicated cases through to large numbers of more standard claims, where a proactive, decisive and cost - effective strategy is essential.
Many civil law countries lack an express mechanism for grouping large numbers of similar claims together into a single case except in very limited circumstances.
This can take a few seconds or a few minutes, especially if you have a large number of files, and in some cases, such as with very large music libraries, Home Sharing may hang or take an inordinately long time to connect.
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