Sentences with phrase «very narrow circumstances»

One can not go to the Supreme Court (except in some very narrow circumstances involving lawsuits of one state against another and certain cases involving diplomats) without first raising the issue in a lower court.
We can not accept the suggestion that a presumption of validity attach to state laws, and that states not be required to request exceptions except in very narrow circumstances.
Even where the sale has already taken place, in very narrow circumstances, the attorney may be able to get the sale set aside.
«The SC Forestry Association has always supported the common law trespassing standard that landowners owe no duty of care to trespassers except in very narrow circumstances.
Second, the domestic jurisprudence does indeed reflect a limited right to consent, but in very narrow circumstances.

Not exact matches

While I understand the intent of this sentiment and the concern it expresses, this real world conversation can devolve into an overly cynical perspective from which to examine the experiences of our students and seems only to serve as a justification for punitive practices along a very narrow set of circumstances.
The Confusion of Languages is about collision — across boundaries and between cultures for sure, but it also showcases the clashes that can develop between people bound together by marriage, vocation or circumstance... It is a sharp and brilliant meditation on the steep costs of coloring outside the lines, especially in an environment where conforming to the norm demands the difficult task of walking between two very straight and narrow perimeters.
Correction - in some * very * specific, narrow circumstances in which the author has a built - in audience for the book, working with a vanity / subsidy outfit can still make financial sense.
It upheld the constitutionality of the Barreau's action in certain, very narrow, circumstances.
Surely, in interpreting a «fundamental right» a narrow, but universally applicable, interpretation of section 2 (d) should be preferred over a broad intepretation which can only apply in a very narrow set of circumstances.
Not unsurprisingly in the circumstances, your very narrow view circumscribes your analysis.
These approaches, and other variations on them, are often undertaken by less frequent litigants with less experience engaging in eDiscovery, and in certain narrow circumstances (i.e., very small, simple matters with no reason to mistrust custodians), they may be a reasonable choice.
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