Sentences with phrase «wide interpretation»

Some judges have been able to use wide interpretation of rules of procedure to work around the loss of the law and to try to protect expression rights, but the common law of defamation acts against the practice.
on Financial Post: SCC Gives Wide Interpretation to «Fair Dealing» in Copyright Saga Julia Johnson Jul 12, 2012 — 11:00 AM ET
The creation of a commission to assess the proposal has been postponed, but this move exposes how legislators are prone to use wide interpretations of the constitution in the search of a short - term solution to the crisis, in order to divert public attention from their own wrongdoings.
UK organisations could find their statutory obligations more onerous if UK courts apply the working party's wide interpretation instead of the controversial restrictive interpretation of the concept of personal data in Durant v Financial Services Authority [2003] EWCA Civ 1746, [2003] All ER (D) 124 (Dec).
As secretary of the Cambridge University Free Trade Association, he wrote in 1923: «We must hold to free trade, in its widest interpretation, as an inflexible dogma, to which no exception is admitted, wherever the decision rests with us....
The 1986 California law behind the coffee - shop ruling says that businesses must warn consumers about chemicals that cause a significant cancer risk — but «significant» is a very elastic term open to wide interpretation, according to Lichtenfeld.
«The original material of the novel is such a great story, and it has so much to give, then, like a lot of stories that we revisit in the industry, it lends itself very easy to a wider interpretation,» Natalie Dormer says of Amazon's adaptation of Picnic At Hanging Rock, which of course was also a seminal film from director Peter Weir in 1975.
«The original material of the novel is such a great story and it has so much to give, then, like a lot of stories that we revisit in the industry, it lends itself very easy to a wider interpretation,» says Natalie Dormer of Amazon's adaptation of Picnic At Hanging Rock, which of course was also a seminal film from director Peter Weir back in 1975.
The artworks included in this exhibition display the principles of Architecture in a wide interpretation....
The scores range from vague commands that are open to wide interpretation to highly choreographed movements and actions.
She has worked with and written about many of the greatest artists of the period, in particular helping to establish the reputations of many who have defined contemporary art in a new and wider interpretation.
Paper Cut ultimately aims to represent the wide interpretations of one medium and the many ways to explore this common, everyday material.
According to the Court, such a wide interpretation would rid the definition of environmental information in Article 2 (1)(d) of the Aarhus Regulation of any meaning and make it practically impossible for the institutions to apply the exception that aims to protect commercial interests.
Whereas the practical consequence of this wide interpretation of Article 3 might be limited to such exotic devices as the Filmspeler (which is no longer available pursuant to the judgement of the CJEU), the ruling is upsetting the widely held belief that watching streams from unlawful sources is not illegal (a position argued, amongst other, by the Commission, see the AG's Opinion in Filmspeler, paras 38 - 39).
Having rejected a wide interpretation of the term «provided» and also having refused the application of additional criteria to Article 12 (1) by analogy, the CJEU also replied negatively to the question of the German court whether any further criteria had to be taken into consideration in addition to those contained in Article 12 (1) and 2 (b) with systematic coherence and judicial constraint.
Lynk pointed to one upcoming case before the SCC, Withler v. Canada, dealing with supplementary death benefits, but with the potential to provide a wider interpretation for pension benefits.
The Article provides for freedom of religion, thought and conscience and as such requires British courts to adopt a wide interpretation of religion.
On the subject of ACAS certificates, see also Drake International Systems Ltd & Ors v Blue Arrow Ltd EAT 27.1.16 (0282/15) in which the EAT showed itself to be wonderfully creative in interpreting the meaning of the word «matter» in s18A Employment Tribunal Act 1996 (so as to give a wide interpretation to the potential claims covered by the Certificate).
The hon» ble High Court Division of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh, in the case of HRC Shipping Ltd v MVX - Press Manaslu and Others (HRC Shipping)[2] opted for a wide interpretation of the term.
It advanced as far as the Supreme Court before it was rectified by reference to a wider interpretation of the Administration of Justice Act 1982 S20, which was introduced some 35 years ago, with the intention of making it easier to validate a will and to make the law on wills more flexible.
The court followed Marley v Rawlings and decided that in all the circumstances the testator clearly intended those assets to go to the charity and adopted a wider interpretation of «UK» to include the offshore accounts.
Its literal meaning — for whose benefit — carries a wider interpretation in modern usage: determining who has a motive for a crime that has been committed.
Within this wide interpretation, like any other provision being an expression of purely national competences in the light of the allocation of competences between the EU and the Member States, general rules of national criminal law can be attracted to EU law pursuant to implicit linking points (the latter being, for instance, instrumental, sequential, substantive, or intrinsic, as M.E. Bartoloni pointed out) between national law and the EU law itself.
However, while the weight of authority in England and Wales supports a wide interpretation of the phrase «political opinions», the extent of the protection afforded by the extraneous considerations bar has been undermined somewhat by a number of recent, and somewhat inconsistent, decisions.
However, the judge sought interpretive aids for this statute and wrote that the word commercial «calls for a wide interpretation» and included relationships such as «carriage of goods or passengers by air, sea, rail or road.»
Employees will argue for a wide interpretation so as to extend the circumstances in which they will benefit from collective consultation.
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