He believes officers should use their discretion when dealing with speeding offences. |
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What discretion do local authorities have in devising their allocations schemes? |
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As to the second point, is there a live question of discretion in this application? |
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This was because the disposition and armament of the armed forces had been for centuries in the exclusive discretion of the Crown. |
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In those cases they must use their own judgement, relying on their own personal moral compass and using their own discretion. |
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But, remember, the amount of weight you lose is entirely at your own discretion and you can join in or drop out of the campaign at any time. |
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A number of factors will be taken into account in deciding whether to exercise the discretion. |
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The granting of such consent shall be at the sole and absolute discretion of each of the parties. |
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That is always a difficult task for an authority, because it is left with discretion. |
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So I take it that Labour will support this bill so that the police don't have to exercise that discretion. |
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Refunds for late cancellations will be at the discretion of the organisers. |
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Women still buy sanitary towels with enormous discretion, and carry their handbags to the loo when they only need to carry the pad. |
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It would be a just exercise of discretion to award them compensation for the sites acquired. |
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The committee will use its discretion in deciding whether to grant permission or not. |
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But officers can use their discretion to deal with drivers who they consider are not driving with full care and attention. |
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If we were leaving to find a spot to tryst, wouldn't they expect us to do it with a little more discretion? |
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An at-will policy allows employers to terminate workers at the company's discretion. |
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It is then up to the police to decide, in the exercise of their discretion, whether to grant the favour or not. |
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State courts have far greater powers of discretion in sentencing than federal courts. |
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Visiting outside these times will be at the discretion of the senior midwife. |
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While the Government can bargain away its discretion, it did not do so in this case. |
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In my judgment, it cannot be said that, as a matter of form, the Council have created a fetter upon their discretion. |
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Judges and Magistrates have discretion and accept mitigating circumstances and the limits of the law. |
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I left the organization and division of responsibilities to the discretion of the students. |
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But it wants to do this by cutting basic pay and introducing a complicated bonus system that can be withheld at management's discretion. |
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Ethics cannot be left to the discretion of anyone who is frivolous or trigger-happy. |
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This was a decision within the discretion of the judge, not vitiated by misdirection or manifest error. |
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Sometimes, as here, valor among black minstrels consisted of exercising discretion and living to fight another day. |
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Rules say bus drivers can use their discretion regarding dogs but they must have a valid reason for refusing. |
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Further, there are in my judgment a number of factors which militate against the exercise of discretion to order an assessment. |
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There are two separate and distinct conditions for the exercise of the discretion created by that provision. |
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His lack of discretion sent a message to his staff that there were no bounds, and they acted accordingly. |
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He says he hopes selectors use their discretion and pick him for the event anyway. |
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However, it is entirely at the discretion of local authorities how this is applied. |
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Some players also allow the ace to be worth one or fourteen at the discretion of the person who plays or captures it. |
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Paul is renowned for his discretion, for keeping his counsel as well as his word. |
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If these people play fair and use discretion and common sense, they shall have my full support. |
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Whoever put them in that group probably hoped discretion and goodwill would make sense of an anomaly. |
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You need never worry about announcing yourself to her, she is the absolute soul of discretion if you want to keep your ID to yourself. |
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The lawmaker, hoping for discretion, deploys a shadowy envoy to send her child support in the form of regular wads of cash. |
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His discretion in the face of so scrofulous and untutored a palate as mine was marvellous. |
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The truth is any parent who thinks their child is the soul of discretion on the internet is likely to be wrong. |
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Rumour has it that eminent politicians come here seeking discretion and peace. |
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If he is so satisfied, he still is left with the task of deciding whether as a matter of discretion he should order disclosure. |
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Taking all of the circumstances into account, I exercise my discretion and order the discharge of the Certificate. |
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It is said that the refusal to discharge the jury was an unreasonable exercise of discretion. |
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The Master has the discretion to approve or disapprove a claim, or ask for a refund in case a wrong payment was made. |
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Any mistake in the rate is irrelevant because the arbitrator has no discretion to disapply it. |
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The 1995 Act does not, however, give the court a residual discretion to disapply the assumptions if there is a serious risk of injustice. |
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If so, whether the Court ought to exercise its discretion to disapply the limitation period under section 33 of the 1980 Act. |
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In other words the PTAs need not use their discretion to decide on the grievousness of the complaint. |
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I was dying to ask Kath these vital questions, but I decided discretion was the better part of valour. |
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In other words, the trustees have the discretion to make distributions, but haven't done so for years. |
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The person purporting to exercise his discretion has acted in abuse or excess of his power. |
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That discretion, however, must be exercised according to some important principles of public policy. |
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Second, efforts could be made to demonopolize decision making, such that individual discretion is limited and accountability is strengthened. |
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Prosecutorial discretion is an essential feature of our criminal justice system. |
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They do not confer upon the project manager a broad discretion, similar to that given to certifiers by conventional construction contracts. |
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He is prohibited from operating firearms for 10 years and must get counselling at the discretion of his probation officer. |
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Each of those attacks the defensibility of the exercise of the discretion in the circumstances of this case. |
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The judge may not have the discretion under the federal sentencing guidelines to impose a probationary sentence. |
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As Mr Burton pointed out, there has been no decided case on the exercise of this discretion. |
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Parents are presumptively entitled to exercise complete discretion over the care, custody, and control of their children. |
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A prosecutor has considerable discretion as to what charges he prefers and the trial takes place on those charges. |
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So the agencies hope to pre-empt Congress, in part to preserve their own discretion. |
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One consequence of defining the offence so widely is that reliance is placed on prosecutorial discretion to keep minor incidents out of court. |
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Even the broadest discretion is constrained by the need for there to be countervailing circumstances justifying interference with human rights. |
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This was because the exercise of such discretion was itself subject to judicial review. |
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There is clearly a need for regulators to have some discretion, to enable them to respond flexibly depending on contexts. |
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I assume that nebulous economic term indicates it's some form of slush fund for the pollies to spend at their discretion. |
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Police, fiscals and judges can all exercise discretion over who to prosecute. |
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There is no evidence to suggest that her exercise of her discretion to seek admission of the statement was based on insupportable grounds. |
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According to the student society bylaws, the forum may appoint students to fill these positions at its discretion. |
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It remains to be seen whether in practice the discretion is exercised lawfully. |
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A contract which unlawfully fetters the discretion of a purchaser is ultra vires and invalid. |
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Wisdom is subdivided into good sense, good calculation, quick-wittedness, discretion, and resourcefulness. |
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We have a tradition of discretion on the island but perhaps he isn't quite used to island ways. |
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In rugby union, if a player's thought to be feigning injury, referees have the discretion to order them from the field. |
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The exercise of judicial discretion in a case such as the present may seem at first blush a picayune matter. |
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Singh shows incredible control and discretion in the handling of this difficult material. |
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Most of our fine police officers have a fairly large degree of discretion to use. |
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For so long in the discretion of the South African authorities as they would not permit him to have access to it. |
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However, if a team ices the puck because of a botched pass, the linesman has the discretion to wave it off. |
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As a practical matter, the current legal regime substitutes palliative euphemisms for useful controls on police discretion. |
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There is a marked return to double-breasted coats, discretion at first glance giving way to luxurious linings of mink and chinchilla. |
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Yet originalism frequently fails at its own game of suppressing subjectivity and individual judicial discretion. |
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With minimal discretion, sly-looking men lounge amidst bricks of hash and balls of opium. |
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The letter directs him to use his discretion, but he's given carte blanche to tell them whatever he wants. |
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Upper-class Englishmen pride themselves on discretion and a stiff upper lip, deeply unfashionable human qualities in these tabloid times. |
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It is alarming that surgeries are bogged down by farcical officialism and red tape, instead of leaving medical staff to use their own discretion. |
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His use of obscure jargon underscored the urgent need for secrecy and discretion. |
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Dell will now load the software onto notebooks at the customer's discretion, it says. |
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The judge's discretion was therefore vitiated because the merits of any defence were considerably greater than he had been led to believe. |
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The prosecutor had sole, unfettered discretion to enter a nolle prosequi in this case. |
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The discretion mortgage brokers and lenders have in setting rates and fees leads to inefficiencies. |
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Both of their guitars seem to be learning that brevity is the soul of wit, and discretion that of power. |
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There are two women in Britain who make her look the soul of discretion, refinement and good taste. |
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Pete, using a great amount of discretion, slowed down to a walk and let Gil meet Laurie alone. |
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The discretion must be for the purpose for which the donee of power, the repository of power receives the discretion. |
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In practice the police do exercise some discretion when confronting a motorist driving a few mph over the limit. |
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So, we would submit that discretion should be exercised in our favour, for that reason. |
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Magistrates have a discretion not to disqualify, but only if there are good reasons that fall within narrowly-defined limits. |
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She stared at him, her own discretion fleeting from her as she carefully weighed her words before speaking. |
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This bronchodilator inhaler is used at the discretion of the student for acute symptoms of asthma. |
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Rather, the motions judge exercised his discretion judicially on proper principles. |
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Rule 17 of the Procedure gave Mr. Lester a discretion as to how to conduct the adjudication in this case. |
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Consequently, the Authority's discretion on issues of ethical principle is difficult to challenge. |
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Still, they seem as yet unready to take what they've got as far as they could, erring on the side of discretion. |
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But can an Assembly be dissolved arbitrarily, capriciously, whimsically, at the absolute discretion of a Chief Minister? |
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This wide discretion of the chief constable to keep the peace was affirmed by the House of Lords. |
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After attaining the age of discretion, each of the faithful is bound to confess serious sins at least once a year. |
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Females were judged to have reached the age of discretion for purposes of bequeathing a personal estate at 12 years. |
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After the expiry of the lease period, the landowner will be at his discretion to convert the land into a shopping complex or a multiplex. |
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When he arrives at the age of discretion, the child has the right in the church to receive both sacraments. |
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Exercise of power to grant writ of assistance rests in sound discretion of court, and the power will never be exercised in a case of doubt. |
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Adoption of the incorporation doctrine did not prevent the justices from exercising discretion based on their ideological proclivities. |
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The discretion of a man deferreth his anger, and it is his glory to pass over a transgression. |
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Between 7 and 14, called the dubious age of discretion, the child is still presumed to be incapable, but the presumption is not conclusive. |
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The girls having reached the age of discretion, had, of their own volition, accompanied the men of their choice, the Bench said. |
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The commissioner has broad discretion to allocate and reallocate resources to meet his operational requirements. |
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It was convinced it could do this, because small print gave directors discretion over what they paid by way of terminal bonus. |
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The unnaturalized alien, the proverbial stranger, operated not only on the margins of society but at the mercy and discretion of others. |
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Electronic measures, kill switches, can remove the eBook from your reader at the copyright holder's discretion. |
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These are not the sorts of cases where prosecutorial discretion naturally disfavors prosecution. |
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It requires understanding, sensitivity and discretion, all of which go out the window when the red mist descends. |
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In general, this sort of discretion was entrusted to men with social stature. |
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It is the right to exercise their discretion if a law appears unjust in itself or in its application. |
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Absolute moral standards provide a safe refuge for those frightened to exercise discretion. |
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The exercise of these activities leaves the discretion of judicial authority and the free exercise of judicial power intact. |
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My co-worker came from this area, however, and discretion is the better part of valour. |
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They have instead opted to pass up on a big pay day on the basis that discretion is the better part of valour. |
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It will be entirely at the discretion of the government to decide whether or not to amend that law. |
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The Department cannot have an unfettered discretion to operate it in whatever way it chooses. |
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The details of how to record a score are left to the individual scorer's discretion. |
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It has not been shown that she went outside the generous ambit of the discretion given to her and in my judgment this appeal should be dismissed. |
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There are no possible grounds for challenging this decision, which fell well within the ambit of the judge's discretion. |
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All full-time faculty members serve on term appointments of varying lengths, indefinitely renewable at the discretion of the administration. |
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It will be for the court to exercise its discretion in deciding whether this is the situation. |
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It says that any residence visa or permit is at the discretion of the Minister of Immigration. |
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If your score lies between a band, then it is at the discretion of the exam board what classification you receive. |
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To that end, we reserve the absolute right to edit or remove posts at our discretion. |
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Coursework, because it is entirely at the discretion of an examiner which is usually a resident tutor, can be used to mark down a student. |
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I respectfully question the judge's view regarding the exercise of the enforcing authority's discretion. |
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Any mooring other than a mushroom anchor or helix mooring shall be at the sole discretion of the Harbormaster. |
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The trial judge was entitled to exercise his discretion in dismissing the motion. |
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There are all sorts of arguments about whether people automatically get nationality or whether the new State has complete discretion over these issues and so on. |
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I mean, it does seem to be harnessing the discretion to one, admittedly an important factor but only one factor, in terms of the powers given to the donee of statutory power. |
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The ordinary people are required to accept the Quran in its literal or exoteric sense whereas the philosophers have much more discretion in interpreting scriptural truth. |
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Each artist in the gallery has discretion over the price that will be charged for his or her work. |
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But discretion is just that, not a protection guarantee, so chang remains in legal limbo. |
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The housing authority has, however, a discretion to accede to the request. |
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He said your client had reached the age of discretion, Mr Toomey. |
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We are driven back to the point, I think, as we so often are in public administration, that the answer lies as much in the wise exercise of discretion. |
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It held that in the two cases before it, the girls had reached the age of discretion and had, of their own volition, accompanied men of their choice. |
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The age of discretion comes individually, around seven years, when common bread can be distinguished from the Eucharistic bread, the true Body of Christ. |
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The abuses which we are condemning are due to the fact that they who distinguished one age of discretion for Penance and another for the Eucharist did so in error. |
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If any person arrived at the age of discretion profanely curse or swear or get drunk in public, he shall be fined by a justice one dollar for each offense. |
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We can stop buying woman-hating music and literature and listen to what our children are listening to and exert parental discretion when it's not healthy. |
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The overriding theme of the hundreds of interviews Newman had granted is his discretion. |
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And so we get policies where parents are given no discretion over whether or not to keep their kids home. |
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How from now on we were going to be seeing in Prince Harry nothing but a model of discretion, seriousness and best behaviour? |
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This fact was revealed with a flourish during a Life Lesson on the importance of discretion, which is a story for another day. |
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Bankruptcy judges, who now have considerable discretion in fashioning or waiving repayment plans, will be required to follow much more restrictive guidelines. |
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Perhaps, says eberhard, even in species where battles of the sexes may seem to be fought, female discretion is key. |
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As Macmillan realized he had been betrayed, his whole belief system, based on Edwardian values and social discretion, collapsed. |
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Japan may extradite its nationals to a country with which it has such a treaty only after the case is reviewed by the Tokyo High Court and at the government's discretion. |
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The challenge there was to a refusal to exercise a discretion to revoke the deportation order, which decision is premised on the validity of the deportation order. |
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The circumstances are that there is a discretion under the Act for the Minister to allow a fresh application but there is no entitlement as of right. |
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She drew breath and poised herself between candor and discretion. |
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Huge sums of money are at stake, so timing and discretion are paramount. |
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It is a situation that calls for sensitivity, tact and discretion. |
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The overarching discretion of the trial judge to take into account the particular circumstances of the offender is essential to the imposition of a fair and just sanction. |
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Several newspapers last week displayed a lack of taste and discretion which was, frankly, ghoulish and surely contravened two clauses of the editors' code of practice. |
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It is critical to focus on concrete and implementable options, on a low profile, discretion and promptness. |
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I'm certain that some Chess players envisage themselves as political masterminds manipulating people behind the scenes but this is entirely at the discretion of the player. |
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Considering what else a distressed passenger in need of a facility might have deposited in a barf bag, the man in question seems to me to be the acme of discretion. |
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That would have been quite inconsistent with the whole nature of a waiver as a discretion to be exercised on the merits of the individual case, and with the Waivers Policy. |
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He refused, and under pressure announced a Mickey Mouse substitute which gives NT police the discretion whether or not to charge a minor for a first offence. |
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His Honour did not misapprehend the facts, he did not misapply legal principle, he did not miscalculate the damages, nor did he err in the exercise of his discretion. |
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The logic of the chorus has both eyes blacked each time, and it is no surprise that verse three finds the young man recommending non-engagement, or at least discretion. |
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The Constitution empowers the president, at his sole and unreviewable discretion, to pardon anyone for any federal crime. |
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Again, you will see no military awards made for valorous discretion in combat. |
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But you must use discretion if you wish to survive your blood feud. |
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Craighead predicted serious problems in systematic enforcement of the ordinance because conductors and motormen were allowed to use their own discretion in seating passengers. |
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Once they have undergone an official briefing and paid the annual marine park entrance fee, suitably certified divers are free to dive unescorted and at their own discretion. |
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He keeps order chiefly thanks to the patronage that he can grant and withdraw according to his discretion and whim. |
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Is not your problem that the sentencing judge made mistakes which vitiated his decision and enabled the Court of Criminal Appeal to exercise its own discretion? |
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There was a discretion to her febrility which was really good. |
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The effect then is that the discretion conferred by Parliament is exercised, at least in part, by the wrong authority, and the resulting decision is ultra vires and void. |
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Critics in the RCA said the policy made conversion a bureaucratic process and denied them discretion in accepting converts. |
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The idea is that the actual bylaw stays in place but the police will exercise greater discretion to allow drinking in closed off areas outside cafes and restaurants. |
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Campaigns have a right to demand discretion, but to engage in opposition research and assume no one will ever find out is naive and ill serves a campaign. |
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It is difficult to imagine an injectable or other mode of administration competing effectively with the discretion and simplicity of an orally acting therapeutic. |
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This is, of course, a discretion a Bulgarian President is able to exercise, given that constitutionally the office is not purely limited to a ceremonial role. |
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Today reserves the right to substitute the concert and recording session or elements thereof with a prize of equal or greater value at their sole discretion. |
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In the debates, the candidates will be allowed two-minute responses, 90-second rebuttals and 60-second surrebutters at the discretion of the moderator. |
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When an attorney exercises peremptory challenges, she uses her discretion to reject potential jurors who are not, objectively speaking, objectionable. |
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A special residence permit is issued at the justice minister's discretion. |
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Surely an anniversary is not a matter of discretion, but determined by the stipulated period of time elapsing in its usual and inalterable course? |
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The serious looking female civil service type of indeterminate age who sat to my left was a model of discretion prior to Jack's appearance on stage. |
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The discretion to deprive a successful litigant of costs is one which must be exercised judicially and upon proper material connected with the case. |
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Under that statute, judges have discretion to order return of any gift made in contemplation of marriage, in the event the marriage never takes place. |
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The remainder is invested into common and preferred stock, and cash and convertible bonds, which can be transformed into equity at an investor's discretion. |
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The rationale behind prohibiting some exercises of discretion is that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects people against invidious discrimination. |
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It enables the navigation authority to control, by licences issuable at its discretion, the installation and continuity of any works affecting the public river. |
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Moreover, there was no basis for him to exercise discretion to allow the statutory declarations to stand in place of the counterstatements in the proceedings. |
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The reasons did come to a crescendo in the end and referred to discretion. |
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Fried bread, potatoes, mushrooms, fancy jams, and regional frills such as porridge, black pudding, laverbread, or gammon are provided at the discretion of the proprietor. |
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A topic that needs to be treated with delicacy and discretion. |
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As a matter of law and as a matter of discretion, I think that justice requires the claimant, if it wishes further to prosecute its new claims, to do so in a fresh action. |
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It was submitted that his decision in the claimant's case to extend the period of nine months to eighteen months was a matter of judgement which was within his discretion. |
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And, in any event, in the case of a claim in respect of personal injuries, the court would retain a discretion to disapply the primary limitation period. |
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In any event, even if that discretion could be attacked it was in no way the fault of the prosecution that the jury was discharged on that occasion. |
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But some of the state laws give the discloser too much discretion. |
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References can be at various levels of discreetness and of discretion. |
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I am hoping for discretion and will certainly give that in return. |
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There are times when discretion is the better part of valour, of course. |
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After a divorce, community property is divided equally in some states and according to the discretion of the court in the other states. |
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By the 16th century the intervention of the Chancellor was increasingly said to depend on principles, rather than on some unbounded discretion. |
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Some Houses, at the discretion of the House Master, may observe a second Quiet Hour after prayers in the evening. |
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In the West confirmation of children is delayed until they are old enough to understand or at the bishop's discretion. |
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The Court has the discretion to appoint an advisory jury if it so desires, but this power is practically never exercised. |
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The allocation and transfer of responsibilities between ministers and departments is also generally at the Prime Minister's discretion. |
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The trial judge has the discretion to direct that one or two alternate jurors also be appointed. |
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This is called petitioning for a writ of certiorari, and the Supreme Court may choose, in its sole discretion, to review any lower court ruling. |
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The exercise of powers is at the discretion of the council, but they are legally obliged to exercise duties. |
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The settlor has much discretion when creating the trust, subject to some limitations imposed by law. |
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He argued that this did not necessarily create judicial discretion to alter it, and that proper did not necessarily equal perfect. |
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The chancellor was accountable solely to, and served entirely at the discretion of, the Emperor. |
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The DMU may also seed other riders directly to the Final at their discretion. |
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The fee for testing and retesting is at the discretion of the proprietor of the test facility, subject to legal maximum prices. |
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The 1982 amendments to the Montreux Convention allow Turkey to close the Straits at its discretion in both wartime and peacetime. |
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The Lord High Steward selected, at his discretion, any twelve or more peers to be Lords Triers. |
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Is my friend all perfection, all virtue and discretion? Has he not humours to be endured? |
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Field Marshals von Rundstedt and Rommel repeatedly asked Hitler for more discretion but were refused. |
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Relevancy not always an open sesame having in mind the over-all authority and discretion of the trial judge. |
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The student-athlete code of conduct says punishment for all nonfelony crimes is left to the discretion of the coach. |
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Directives require member states to achieve a certain result while leaving them discretion as to how to achieve the result. |
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Admission to A level programmes is at the discretion of providers, and usually depends on GCSE grades. |
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In Scotland, this authority is delegated to Lord Lyon King of Arms at his or her own discretion. |
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To be granted by the diocesan, at whose discretion one or more chapelries are to be founded by Robert. |
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The three occupation powers had complete discretion over dismantlings, however. |
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Kidnapping is punishable with imprisonment or fine at the discretion of the court. |
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One solution is to reduce the discretion of subunit managers in setting transfer prices. |
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Cabin and aircraft navigation light intensity is at the sole discretion of the captain. |
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The synods' action leaves the decision to bless same-sex partnerships to the discretion of local church councils. |
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All implantation procedures were performed under analgosedation with the applied drugs left to the discretion of the respective physician. |
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Timekeeping is at the discretion of the referee who adds on stoppage time at the end of each half. |
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In the name of familial discretion, Mauriac always refused to reveal to the public the entirety of his personal history. |
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Similarly, the use of Rally 2 regulations is at the discretion of event organisers. |
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He always uses care and discretion when dealing with others. |
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It is within his discretion to govern monarchically as vicar of Christ, or to proceed collegially as head of the college. |
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It is the discretion of BAI president Akhilesh Das Gupta and on an unconditional apology, Jwala can be set free. |
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Under the plan, ODA inspectors have discretion about when to inspect and reinspect. |
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Until now, airlines have had discretion over whether to grant a refund or rebook passengers. |
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Trial judges are very concerned about limitations on their discretions, they're very concerned about granting prosecutors too much discretion. |
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The coach used his own discretion to let the injured quarterback play. |
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Ginsburg, in her dissent, wrote that the appellate court had acted correctly in evaluating the award for abuse of discretion. |
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A change may be an abuse of discretion if it results in similar taxpayers being taxed differently. |
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Templeton shall have no discretion or control over the timing or effectuation of the sales. |
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A judge, more freely than a jury, can exercise discretion uncouched in technical legalities. |
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Governments also have limited discretion to continue to direct a small proportion of the total subsidy to support specific crops. |
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Board members are appointed at the discretion of and by the permanent secretary. |
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There were certain matters that he was to administer at his own discretion, in which he was responsible to the Secretary of State. |
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According to owner Argiros, the answer is amiable discretion. |
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Ordinary seamen received a part of the plunder at the captain's discretion but usually a single share. |
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In 2008, the batting team was given discretion for the timing of one of the two powerplays. |
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White's sexual explicitness masks a deeper discretion about the complexities and irrationalities of love. |
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All British passports are issued in the exercise of discretion by Her Majesty's Government under the royal prerogative. |
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The office has absolute discretion in some areas, such as referring a bill to the Supreme Court for a judgment on its constitutionality. |
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The exercise of these powers is entirely at the President's discretion, for which the President is neither legally nor politically responsible. |
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The bill will then go before the Monarch who has formal discretion whether to assent to the bill. |
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The choice of clubs is at the golfer's discretion, although every club must be constructed in accordance with parameters outlined in the rules. |
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The Rules grant trial judges broad discretion to admit evidence in the face of competing arguments from the parties. |
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The US Coastguard leaves it to ship owners' discretion to determine if those guards will be armed. |
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Additionally, appellate courts have a much broader discretion to review findings of fact by juries in civil cases. |
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Previously, Paymasters had been able to draw on money from HM Treasury at their discretion. |
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The court held, inter alia, that the trial court providently exercised its discretion in precluding the plaintiffs from calling an expert radiologist to testify. |
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Darley initially welcomed the BHA's amendments to allow stewards more discretion and a greater degree of flexibility, but criticised restricting the document to stipes. |
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To give subtiltyto the simple, to the young man knowledge and discretion. |
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Any number of written purchase orders may be issued at the discretion of the city to increase or decrease available funds during the term of the agreement. |
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Similar to statutory exclusion mechanisms, prosecutorial discretion is often limited to a subset of cases based on age and offense characteristics. |
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At the time of the stock launch, after the Registration Statement has become effective, indications of interest can be converted to buy orders, at the discretion of the buyer. |
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Children above the age of 13 may perform light work for a limited number of hours per week in other economic activities as defined at the discretion of each country. |
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Once in the country, the validity period of a visa or authorized stay can often be extended for a fee at the discretion of immigration authorities. |
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The Agency intends to exercise enforcement discretion regarding specific Part 11 requirements related to computer-generated, time-stamped audit trails. |
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The European Court of Human Rights has held that the right to property is not absolute and states have a wide degree of discretion to limit the rights. |
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Additional time between races will be allowed by, and at the discretion of, the referee if a rider has two consecutive rides, to allow the rider time to prepare. |
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The court held, inter alia, that in accordance with the grounds Horizon set forth for its appeal, the court would review the trial court's ruling for an abuse of discretion. |
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A two-inch in diameter hole in the front of the pouch allows flashing lights to be seen and an earsplitting chirper or alarm to be heard at the parents' discretion. |
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Further, the right to reparation would depend on the nature of the breach of Community law in question and the extent of the discretion available to the State in question. |
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The undersellers resented the restrictions which prevented them from lowering the price to customers at their discretion, which might result in more sales overall. |
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It also has some discretion over charges for government services. |
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As the monarch retained some discretion as to which leader should be invited to form a ministry, it was not always obvious in advance which one would be called upon to do so. |
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If a car fails scrutineering, the driver will be excluded from qualifying, but will be allowed to start the race from the back of the grid at the race steward's discretion. |
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Misjoinder is a question of law, and is not a matter of discretion. |
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However, because the United Kingdom is a constitutional monarchy, the Prime Minister uses his or her own discretion regarding whether or not to follow the Queen's advice. |
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It is at the discretion of the Speaker of the House of Commons to certify which bills are money bills, and his decision is final and is not subject to challenge. |
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The duration of stoppage time is at the sole discretion of the referee. |
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The termination of an abeyance is entirely at the discretion of the Crown. |
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