Their supreme court subsequently endorsed unanimously the constitutionality of the transfer of power. |
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By crushing the traditions of the Senate he would pack the courts, especially the supreme court, with lockstep ideologues. |
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Today, supreme court jurists and Washington politicians display no embarrassment in citing Magna Carta to support their case. |
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The judicial branch includes a supreme court with justices appointed by the president. |
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Three of the nine supreme court justices could well step down in the next few years. |
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Each republic had an independent judiciary with a supreme court, lower courts, and a constitutional court. |
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District courts hear civil and criminal cases, high courts hear appeals, and the supreme court reviews judgments by lower courts. |
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The judicial branch consists of the supreme court and several layers of lower courts. |
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William Rehnquist, chief justice of the US supreme court, is 80 years old and has been diagnosed with a serious form of thyroid cancer. |
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The formal system is organized under an independent judiciary headed by a supreme court. |
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In Alabama, a chief justice of the state supreme court was forced to remove a giant monument of the 10 Commandments from his courthouse. |
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As in the United States, the judicial branch is comprised of a supreme court and lower, local courts. |
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He no longer sits with the law lords and will have no place in the new supreme court. |
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A supreme court defeat would wipe four or five points off the price of the bond in a day. |
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That man owes her big time, both for his presidency and now the chance to shape the supreme court for a generation. |
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Meanwhile, America's compo culture has hit new peaks with a ruling from the Alaska supreme court. |
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There were several public meetings, a court case, a supreme court hearing and writs of ejectment, but Forsyth refused to go. |
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As long as it stood, it was the supreme court and legislative body in all matters of Torah law. |
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He says, however, that the questions about whether the supreme court is going to be a complication are difficult to answer because it's too soon. |
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The council is the church's supreme court, a nine-member panel that at times has more power than the Council of Bishops. |
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When it does, the 12 law lords will no longer be members of the House of Lords but will become supreme court justices. |
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And this may, in turn, make them far more amenable to compromise on postal voting and a new supreme court. |
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In 1997 Hutton became one of the law lords who comprise Britain's supreme court, ending his career when he retired this month. |
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Now that the Ukrainian supreme court is nixing a run-off and ordering new elections, it's not expected to quiet down anytime soon. |
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A supreme court judge offers some interesting advice but sadly does not develop it further. |
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The supreme court, however, ruled that Adamov could not claim that his detention violated the principle of safe conduct. |
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Any town officer may be removed from office by the supreme court for any misconduct, maladministration, malfeasance or malversation in office. |
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In 2000, Bush said his favourite supreme court justices were the ultraconservatives, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas. |
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It led to the US supreme court ruling that the segregation of buses was unconstitutional. |
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So, automatically, these licenses are voided because the supreme court rules that the mayor overstepped his bounds? |
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In October 1999, Marshall became one of 13 women at the helm of a state supreme court. |
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The chief justice of the supreme court has stepped into the presidency, as stipulated in the constitution. |
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Another test will be the imminent retirement of the chief justice of the supreme court, William Rehnquist, who has thyroid cancer. |
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The high court, a court of appeals, and a supreme court constitute the core of the justice system. |
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Southwood will hear the application that he disqualify himself in the Darwin supreme court on Friday. |
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Once appointed, supreme court nominees stand for election in order to be retained. |
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The two cases of the supreme court heard today were cases in point. |
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His decision is stayed until the state supreme court reviews the case. |
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The county court upheld her suspension, and at the end of November the state's supreme court refused to hear the case she had lodged in defence of free speech. |
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By sheer bloody-mindedness we went through with the law suits, despite threats from the investor, and were recently told we had won our case in the supreme court. |
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We know that members of the Reform Party are not keen on the supreme court. |
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The supreme court and lower courts comprise the judicial branch. |
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Lawyers for the prisoners have been tied up ever since in a series of appeals and counter appeals to different levels of court to get the hearings the supreme court promised. |
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The New South Wales supreme court this week found the article and image had defamed the senator. |
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Britain's most senior judges are set to move to a new supreme court housed in a former judicial building facing the Palace of Westminster in Parliament Square. |
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That's being argued right now in the supreme court of justice, by the way. |
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While badmouthing each other in public, they have banded together to control bodies such as the CSE and the supreme court. |
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There is no constitutional court and the supreme court does not have an explicit right to declare a law unconstitutional. |
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The law school graduate clerked for the supreme court judge for the summer. |
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In 1672, the High Court of Justiciary was founded from the College of Justice as a supreme court of appeal. |
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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council is the supreme court of 14 Commonwealth members. |
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Generally, a common law court system has trial courts, intermediate appellate courts and a supreme court. |
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The inferior courts are bound to obey precedent established by the appellate court for their jurisdiction, and all supreme court precedent. |
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We also have very clear information from the Washington Post that the Colombian presidential palace had ordered wiretapping and general surveillance of supreme court judges, opposition politicians, activists and journalists. |
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It cannot address anything other than the issue brought before it, at the risk of having its decision overturned by the provincial court of appeal or supreme court because it went too far. |
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We said that the supreme court made a decision and the lower courts got it wrong so we are going to refer it back to the supreme court to give a decision. |
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The state supreme court has seven elected justices, currently including the only two openly gay state supreme court justices in the nation. |
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What the supreme court had been asked to consider was a statute applying only in Scotland under which one former cohabitant can be ordered to provide financial support for another after they have split up. |
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Will the government add one clause to Bill C-79, to put these videotapes under lock and key and show the supreme court that parliamentarians have compassion for victims, even if it does not? |
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The Orthodox chief rabbinate was originally granted a monopoly over matters of personal status, such as conversion, marriage and burial, but Israel's supreme court has gradually eaten away at it. |
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The legal system was overhauled and regularized as well, and already in 1661 a supreme court, with jurisdiction over the entire kingdom, had replaced the old system whereby the king and the Rigsråd heard legal appeals. |
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Davis's case has become even more charged by the manner of his death: he was reprieved three times before Wednesday night and an intervention by the supreme court delayed the execution by four hours. |
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I will say on the record that I hope the attorney general in British Columbia will appeal the recent decision of the B. C. supreme court which cited artistic merit as a reason for acquitting Mr. Sharpe. |
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In countries where access to the supreme court is subject to a leave to appeal being granted, decisions whereby leave to appeal is denied or granted are unreasoned. |
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President Uribe also has demonized members of his own supreme court who were investigating links between politicians and the ruling coalition and paramilitaries. |
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Will the government add one clause to Bill C-79 to put these videotapes under lock and key so we can show the supreme court that parliamentarians care about victims, even if it does not? |
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The award-winning architect filed a lawsuit in Manhattan supreme court last week, accusing the highbrow magazine and its architecture critic, Martin Filler, of defamation. |
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But doesn't the US supreme court choose its own docket? |
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Tolokonnikova has also continued to appeal against her guilty verdict through the Moscow court system, and is one step away from it reaching the country's pliant supreme court. |
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In the final gruesome hours of waiting, the American judicial system at its very highest echelons was involved – including the US supreme court, which issued the decisive final ruling. |
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The supreme court refused Sustainable Shetland leave to appeal to the European court, but the campaigners said they would review their legal options. |
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The Hoge Raad der Nederlanden is the supreme court of the Kingdom by virtue of the Cassation regulation for the Netherlands Antilles and Aruba. |
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The College of Bishops constitutes the episcopal synod, the supreme court of appeal. |
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If one is convicted at the district court, the defence can make an appeal on procedural grounds to the supreme court. |
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The supreme court might admit this complaint, and the case will be reopened yet again, at another district court. |
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The State of California uses San Francisco as the home of the state supreme court and other state agencies. |
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A jurisdiction's supreme court is that jurisdiction's highest appellate court. |
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The Court ceased operation in 1832 and its functions were subsumed into the Court of Session, Scotland's supreme court for civil disputes. |
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Alternatively, federal courts can certify questions to a state supreme court, so long as the state itself has a procedure in place to allow this. |
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The first bills for the creation of a federal supreme court, introduced in the Parliament of Canada in 1869 and in 1870, were withdrawn. |
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The European Court of Justice acts only as a supreme court for the interpretation of European Union law. |
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At federation in 1901, the supreme court of each colony became the supreme court of that State. |
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Nonetheless, by the 1980s the possibility of appeal from a State supreme court was seen as outdated. |
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Her lawsuit, filed in Manhattan's state supreme court, said she agreed a pounds 12,000 fee to appear on Scherzi A Parte, the Italian equivalent of Candid Camera. |
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The Law Council served as both parliament and supreme court. |
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Normally, however, the Parliament sits in The Hague, the city which has historically been the seat of the Dutch government, the Dutch monarchy, and the Dutch supreme court. |
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The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom is the supreme court in all matters under English and Welsh law, Northern Ireland law and Scottish civil law. |
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