It is symptomatic of an unacceptable cheese-paring attitude to contemplate immediate reduction in the judicial resource in the Court of Appeal. |
|
In the judicial branch the Supreme Court of Justice is the highest tribunal. |
|
The trend among democracies over the last few decades has been toward judicial review of legislative as well as executive action. |
|
The judicial decision must be made before sentence is passed and the decision must be made obvious by the judge. |
|
Even if they had paid the beneficiary, they would be able to seek to recover the compensation by certain judicial procedures. |
|
As evidence for this point, consider that illegally or unethically obtained documents have often surfaced in the context of judicial nominations. |
|
The very nature of judicial corporal punishment is that it involves one human being inflicting physical violence on another human being. |
|
The reasoning was based on the constitutional separation of legislative and judicial powers. |
|
The grant of refugee status was made on the 13 November, following hot on the heels of the judicial review application made four days earlier. |
|
The judicial branch interprets the constitution and is the final passer of laws. |
|
The country was divided by Henry II into six judicial circuits for the purpose of bringing royal justice to all regions. |
|
If not to defeat him, to question his judicial beliefs as a way of demarking how they differ from liberal conceptions of jurisprudence. |
|
This measure flies in the face of judicial efforts to insist on disclosure of evidence. |
|
The Claimant in this claim for judicial review is the Secretary of State for the Home Department. |
|
The promisee can see only his right ab intra, the duty of the promisor and the judicial process he has to see ab extra. |
|
Overall, the Court's peremptory style in addressing the jus ad bellum reflects an unfortunate ipse dixit approach to judicial reasoning. |
|
In this way the Administration sidestepped both the legislative and judicial branches. |
|
It includes the methods for choosing the holders of executive, judicial and legislative power. |
|
The question at issue, then, is whether the judicial function has any role to fulfill in evaluating the process. |
|
He's the ranking Democrat on the judicial committee, which will get a first crack at this nomination. |
|
|
As in the United States, the judicial branch is comprised of a supreme court and lower, local courts. |
|
Anyone can file a complaint for judicial misconduct with the clerk of the federal court of appeals for the circuit in which a given judge sits. |
|
It appears that these judicial supremacists, as Lord Cooke identified them, are confident that they are on a roll. |
|
For those who disagree with a judge's opinion, there is ample opportunity to respond within the normal workings of the judicial system. |
|
Democrats control neither Congress nor the White House, but they are trying their best to control the judicial nominating process. |
|
It wasn't really codification, because Congress did not set down a legislative rule to supplant the judicial one. |
|
Academic and even judicial uncertainty remains about the exact meaning and scope of the term. |
|
The authorities can now secretly tap into e-mails and mobile phone calls and track websites visited without the need for a judicial warrant. |
|
The judicial system was not efficient enough and people rarely received fast and fair justice. |
|
In my view the incorporation of a local action group ought not to be a bar to the bringing of an application for judicial review. |
|
But it puts even more pressure on him to be a down-the-line supporter of every judicial nominee the president sends up to the Hill. |
|
The notion that a judicial institution enjoys inherent powers or limitations is rooted in an objectivist view of the judicial function. |
|
The judicial branch consists of the supreme court and several layers of lower courts. |
|
They are either totally ignorant or contemptuous of the fundamentals of a civilised judicial system. |
|
That degree of commitment could easily disqualify a judicial tribunal for bias. |
|
The legality and legitimacy of that action must be subject to judicial review. |
|
We have no charter defining the scope of the powers of the legislative, executive and judicial branches of government. |
|
All government bodies, executive, legislative, and judicial are now subordinate to the government. |
|
The judicial system does not ensure due process, and prisoners are often tortured. |
|
Sometimes the text clearly mandates this, in which case I take it that many advocates of judicial restraint wouldn't object. |
|
|
None of my remarks were in any way calculated to influence the judicial process. |
|
In this decision, I am not jettisoning all case law developed by judicial decision on the facts of real cases. |
|
From 1833,old notions of adverse possession, disseisin or ouster from possession should not have formed part of judicial decisions. |
|
That is to say there was no entitlement to judicial review on the merits of the question according to Justice Gray. |
|
The visa is valid until 28 days after the completion of the judicial review proceedings. |
|
The federal appellate courts are vastly undermanned, largely because Congress blocks more judicial nominees than it confirms. |
|
They charge her with intractableness in refusing to answer the judges at her trial, ignoring the fact that this was her judicial right. |
|
The gross inadequacy of the legal defense for persons facing execution is fostered by the state's judicial system. |
|
Our system ordinarily reserves that function to the judicial officer hearing the merits of the matter. |
|
This does not mean, however, that a simple allegation of a novel claim may pass judicial scrutiny. |
|
The poll was just one of many signs of the divorce between business and the judicial system. |
|
For all its vaunted power, judicial supremacy exists at the sufferance of the people. |
|
Here the delusion of judicial immortality takes its most pathetic form, blind to vanity and vexation of spirit. |
|
Last week Midlothian council said its solicitors would seek a judicial review and an interdict to block the referendum. |
|
Is it any wonder people have lost faith in the political and judicial systems? |
|
The judicial sentence of death by execution has been present since the formation of the first civilised societies. |
|
All energy was put into judicial censoring action, finding allies within the Right, thereby showing a vehement conservatism within feminism. |
|
Whether the Blair government's new law withstands judicial scrutiny remains to be seen. |
|
It was not in pursuance of any Court Order or other judicial or external authorisation. |
|
He was released by order of an examining magistrate on 30 June after 44 days without access to judicial review or to his family or lawyer. |
|
|
The judicial branch includes a supreme court with justices appointed by the president. |
|
Do they want him to go around hanging his head in shame, in some sort of judicial purdah? |
|
The exercise of these activities leaves the discretion of judicial authority and the free exercise of judicial power intact. |
|
She worked as a judicial extern for two US federal judges as well as a trainee at the European Commission's Legal Service. |
|
Doubtless, they looked upon those opposed to the creation of a common judicial area in Europe as swivel-eyed Europhobes. |
|
The Nuremberg trials came into existence out of a multitude of political and judicial concerns. |
|
Government inquiries and judicial tribunals have heaped further ordure upon this most conservative of professions. |
|
It also shows that copyright holders and their supporters will lean on the police to dispense summary punishment through judicial seizure. |
|
Can I say in defence of the Commonwealth, we were never trying to pull swifties on judicial safeguards. |
|
The costs could continue to rise as the Ministry of Defence is considering applying for a judicial review of the inquest. |
|
He is not only subverting the judicial branch's integrity when he forswears himself under oath. |
|
In addition, as a matter of practice, judicial review proceedings took a number of months. |
|
Judicial activists also downplay stare decisis, preferring to remedy perceived judicial errors. |
|
There is no provision for judicial determination of the legality of detention. |
|
The sheriff's office, instead, runs the county jail, provides security for the courts and county buildings and serves judicial subpoenas. |
|
An appeal is an expensive step in the judicial process and one that makes an exacting claim on judicial resources. |
|
Those remarks were moral judgments outside the scope of any special judicial expertise. |
|
A slightly longer period may be justifiable but indeterminate detention without judicial approval is not. |
|
In his biting dissent Justice Antonin Scalia charged that Justice Stevens' unusual approach was a result of judicial bias in favor of abortion. |
|
Poverty and lack of judicial responsibility entice officials into complicity. |
|
|
In other words it only adjudicates cases where national prosecutorial or judicial authorities are unable or unwilling to deal with a case. |
|
The data indicate that only 12 of Ohio's estimated 300 weekly and alternative newspapers editorialized on the judicial race. |
|
In some judicial courts in the early eighteenth century, attorneys had to kneel while university-educated advocates pleaded at the bar. |
|
On the contrary, she appears to have discharged her duty in that case commendably, and to have been a model of judicial restraint. |
|
Our disagreements are fraternal, and we support each other whenever there are judicial problems. |
|
Before taking his own life, the gunman wrote that the judge had abused her judicial power in dismissing his medical malpractice case. |
|
The second section of analyses concerns judicial constructions of breach of trust. |
|
It is addressing a different realm of discourse, namely, performance of judicial functions. |
|
It is said therefore that the power to punish or to impose consequences which are penal or punitive is an exclusively judicial one. |
|
Last September Mr Justice Pitchford rejected their judicial review challenge to the Home Office's stance. |
|
And some courts have taken judicial notice of the irrationality of certain pseudosciences, including phrenology and astrology. |
|
A few months later, the editor expressed his outrage at the short-sightedness of the judicial opinion. |
|
Its content, however, reflects both the handicaps mentioned and the limitations of the judicial process. |
|
We do not anticipate making further comments during the pendency of the judicial process. |
|
Lord Falconer said failed asylum seekers would no longer be able to appeal to the High Court or through judicial reviews. |
|
The judicial decision ought to provide the best answer not a range of alternative answers. |
|
A claim for judicial review may include a claim for damages, restitution or the recovery of a sum due but may not seek such a remedy alone. |
|
The pair filed a petition in B.C. Supreme Court, asking for a judicial review of the bishop's decision to fire them. |
|
The intention in such cases is that there shall be a judicial inquiry worked out in a judicial manner. |
|
Legislative law and judicial decree are being used by the collectivists to mandate outrageous dictates. |
|
|
For them, a person's right to life is clearly subsidiary to the maintenance of judicial power and the idea of procedural justice. |
|
He examines the roles of the judicial and legislative bodies in the U.S. in framing labor markets. |
|
The speakers praised the deeds of the former Mayor whose second term was truncated by legislative and judicial developments. |
|
It certainly merits a full-powers independent judicial investigation where questions cannot be evaded. |
|
The applicant filed an application for judicial review, but it was dismissed by consent. |
|
However, these principles had never strictly applied in public law and judicial review. |
|
But I hope that here we can avoid that kind of simplistic muckraking and have a serious discussion about judicial philosophy. |
|
There must be an active judicial hearing or trial where the court is represented by a judge or justice of the peace. |
|
Last spring, I got into a heated argument with a bunch of lawyers about judicial activism. |
|
He assumed the nation's highest judicial office, one that assumes its holder to have an unblemished record. |
|
The principle of legality doesn't clash with the power of judicial review when the courts must invalidate criminal laws. |
|
But when it comes to the race cases before the Supreme Court, too many conservatives abandon both originalism and judicial restraint. |
|
They have been denied the rights afforded under the proper judicial process. |
|
Isn't privacy analysis based on substantive due process an example of illegitimate, activist judicial review? |
|
The provision limiting comment accords with the present law in those jurisdictions where judicial comment may be made. |
|
The uncovering of serious acts of judicial misconduct could end up with a recommendation to impeach a judge. |
|
But the Constitution also provides for impeachment, and some pushback against judicial power is a good thing. |
|
Judicial creativity has been most obviously and constructively expressed in the rapid expansion of the law of judicial review. |
|
This focuses attention on what in my view is the single important difference between judicial review and civil suit, the differing time limits. |
|
The new courthouse features 14 courtrooms and judicial chambers for the U.S. District Court and the U.S. Magistrate. |
|
|
This is fitting, as originalism has more in common with biblical exegesis than any responsible form of judicial decision-making. |
|
The President appoints the chief justice, and they together determine the other judicial appointments. |
|
Yet originalism frequently fails at its own game of suppressing subjectivity and individual judicial discretion. |
|
The question to what extent error of a non-jurisdictional fact is a separate ground for judicial review is not settled. |
|
She has applied to the high court for a judicial review of the non-inclusion of her partner in her tenancy agreement. |
|
Of course, if the Secretary of State gets it wrong in refusing to entertain the application, there would be a remedy by way of judicial review. |
|
However, such a claim is unlikely to attract judicial sympathy for two reasons. |
|
The district attorney has my complete faith and our judicial process is going to have to do better this time. |
|
Planning committees are required to decide planning matters in a judicial way rather than on political considerations. |
|
Our judicial system is not renowned for its speedy and expeditious methods and court cases are often bogged down for years. |
|
Manny is in a total daze as he's processed through the judicial system, handcuffed, and sent to jail. |
|
Despite a media blackout on the province, reports continued to filter out of extra judicial murders, arbitrary arrest and torture. |
|
This strategy uses the procedure called judicial review, and is a public law matter. |
|
I spend my life as a lawyer in the dreamworld that imagines that principles guide judicial decisions. |
|
Preparations are forging ahead for a judicial review, which will come before a High Court judge in Swansea. |
|
But in the chaos of his old judicial chambers, anything could have happened. |
|
And yet the context in which the judicial system is situated has changed radically in the last fifty years. |
|
The old judicial review remedies of certiorari, mandamus and prohibition were never applied to charitable trusts as such. |
|
The second part of the survey examines views on the police, the judicial process and politics. |
|
This was because the exercise of such discretion was itself subject to judicial review. |
|
|
The judicial hypothec arises from any judgment given in civil proceedings by the Royal Court. |
|
In any case, the Supreme Court reviews only a tiny percentage of judicial rulings made each year. |
|
On outer islands and atolls, however, most matters are settled internally, with little reliance on the state judicial apparatus. |
|
The exercise of judicial discretion in a case such as the present may seem at first blush a picayune matter. |
|
These laws were replaced, by statute or judicial decision, with ostensibly gender-neutral standards. |
|
The sect also initiated exhaustive judicial proceedings, but each time the court decided in favor of Spaink. |
|
Drafting points such as these are important but do not justify judicial review of the order. |
|
Because in this country, in the judicial system, money is a great equalizer. |
|
It is in the nature of an administrative process and not a judicial process. |
|
As has been noted, the legality of their actions can be challenged in public law by applications for judicial review. |
|
The great weight of judicial precedent holds that there is no fundamental individual right to own a gun. |
|
In the election of 2000, the party in effect abused the judicial power to seize the presidency for itself, and this time the attempt succeeded. |
|
We do not hold to the view that judicial independence means a licence to behave without restraint. |
|
The Supreme Court opens today, marking our full judicial independence from Britain. |
|
A plea of a fair and accurate report of foreign judicial proceedings was not demurrable. |
|
It is allowed to carry out surveillance like a secret service, and has the judicial powers of a regular police agency. |
|
Introducing judicial recalls will simply replicate this seventeenth century problem, only with the people in the place of the king. |
|
A judicial review is to be launched today at the High Court to overturn the ban which comes into force in February. |
|
Still, its ideal is a judicial system which dispenses objective, appropriate, rational, and wise justice. |
|
He subsequently applied to a judge of the Federal Court for an order staying the immigration inquiry pending the hearing of the judicial review. |
|
|
That process, used when the Senate is in recess, puts a judicial nominee temporarily on the bench without being confirmed. |
|
The next day, he promised a judicial inquiry into the cause of the accident. |
|
The applicant now challenges by way of judicial review the grant of planning permission to the Trustees. |
|
There are before the court two applications for judicial review which both raise the same issue. |
|
The power of judicial review has allowed the Supreme Court to protect civil liberties within America. |
|
In judicial review, the unsuccessful party may be ordered to pay the costs of the other side. |
|
An attorney-at-law shall defend the interest of his client without fear of judicial disfavour or public unpopularity. |
|
Upon reflection, we think that the judicial appointees are the real prize being contended for. |
|
However, more recent jurisprudence demonstrates a judicial resistance towards slavish adherence to that rule. |
|
And the calculations could be thrown out if there was any significant change in the principles according to which judicial remuneration is set. |
|
Judicial immunity promotes independence by allowing the fearless performance of the judicial function. |
|
Some progress has been made on democratic and judicial control, but major deficits persist. |
|
These low-lifers work, drive and shop among us without conscience, in every area of the judicial system. |
|
He then analogizes the situation to the American judicial system in which persons charged with crimes are presumed innocent until proven guilty. |
|
There thus exists the possibility of conflicting judicial opinion at the highest level. |
|
What function is performed by standing rules in judicial review, and how well do the rules serve that function? |
|
This is too narrow an approach to adopt when considering whether an application for judicial review should be stayed. |
|
His selection as President by the Supreme Court in 2000 was a presidential and judicial coup. |
|
As with other questions in this chapter it also covers a number of the judicial actions in the Community legal order. |
|
In the middle of all this is the idea that justice is something to be administered personally, not by the hands of the judicial branch. |
|
|
All good federalists should oppose this judicial augmentation of Congress's powers. |
|
But over the centuries, the U.S. judicial system has amply demonstrated its ability to adapt to new, complex problems in criminal and civil law. |
|
The Constitution will give it a common foreign policy and a common judicial system. |
|
It is achieved by a conventional process of judicial construction of legislation. |
|
But there have been many prominent examples of judicial figures mixing it in contemporary controversies. |
|
I appreciate that in your witness statements in the judicial review, you have referred to financial difficulties. |
|
These statutory changes took place in a period of judicial activism in this area which had relaxed the law. |
|
Success in judicial astrology largely depends on the skill and interpretative judgement of the astrologer. |
|
Any judicial approach is bound to be unwieldy, time-consuming and subject to differing local regulations. |
|
With the Senate gearing up for an all-consuming battle over judicial nominations, Congress has no time to waste. |
|
Such fairness demands a fair judicial process administered by an impartial judiciary. |
|
These days judges read academic articles as part of their ordinary judicial activity. |
|
It would thus be expensive both to the parties and to the resources of the judicial system. |
|
The first question is whether, at the time of the negligent act or omission, a judicial process existed. |
|
I would take judicial notice of that and would expect justices to do the same. |
|
Second, the letter does not seek to make submissions on the merits of the proposed judicial review application. |
|
In such a situation, the grant of judicial power to provincial appointees is valid. |
|
If the continentals couldn't maintain an independent judicial system, then that's their fault. |
|
There is now clear judicial authority as to how overall bias is to be judged. |
|
Judicial protection in Punjab improved and many people were using the judicial system. |
|
|
They are part of the process of judicial interpretation of the law, which is a developing process. |
|
As I have already pointed out, this is not the position in the case of a judicial development of the law. |
|
It would be an abuse of the judicial process to allow proceedings to be repetitive. |
|
Thompson retains the lines but abandons their judicial context, thus depriving the play of its retrospective irony. |
|
This mental torment may become acute when the judicial verdict is finally set against the accused. |
|
There must be a wider judicial inquiry into the way this matter was handled by the British government. |
|
A public inquiry and judicial review is awaited and a housing market crash looms ever closer. |
|
Two years ago, British ministers unveiled plans to allow TV cameras to film appeal court hearings and judicial reviews. |
|
Dozens of these deputized officials were deployed soon after the expanded judicial system became operational. |
|
There is, of course, nothing unconstitutional about filibustering a judicial nomination. |
|
Accordingly, I do not consider this to be a case for granting permission for judicial review. |
|
It also found that the Migration Act contravened international law by barring any judicial review of detention. |
|
It should properly have been raised by an application for judicial review in the High Court. |
|
Your goal is to radically transform our constitutional republic into a judicial oligarchy operated by individuals with a leftist agenda. |
|
Ministers are drawing up plans to allow TV cameras to film appeal court hearings, judicial reviews and Lords hearings. |
|
The court ruling followed a judicial review which was granted to the lobby group in October. |
|
Local authorities must get tough and seek judicial reviews where they think that health authorities have given their taxpayers a raw deal. |
|
Parents fighting to save a primary school from closure have lodged an application for a judicial review. |
|
It is a review function, very similar to that of the court on judicial review. |
|
Barristers have drawn up a legal opinion setting out a test case for a high court judicial review of the government's position. |
|
|
The council said it would not pursue legal costs against parents who sought a judicial review on the closure. |
|
Quite often in these sorts of matters in the past we have had judicial reviews of decisions. |
|
Apart from elaborating the ongoing judicial usurpation on these issues, the conservative voice seems to have become muffled. |
|
The second area would include judicial reform and reform in public administration. |
|
It is said that the claimants had viable alternative remedies by way of judicial review. |
|
Objectors have only five weeks to call for a judicial review, but they have warned their will to fight is undiminished. |
|
In 1864, a system of limited local self-government was introduced and the judicial system was partially westernized. |
|
Historically, fatwas were independent of the judicial system, although some muftis were officially attached to various courts. |
|
Therefore, the search was in his opinion warrantless and unreasonable even though judicial authorization had been obtained. |
|
In addition to being the department's point man for judicial selection, he will have major responsibility for developing its priorities. |
|
After an enormous amount of money and resources and judicial time what are we achieving? |
|
It does not sound like the sort of case the High Court, in the limited jurisdiction of judicial review, would become involved in. |
|
No. To me the idea that words or taunts can enrage somebody to kill and act out of anger, and our judicial system says that's okay, is barbaric. |
|
Such draconian methods point to the shortcomings of a cumbersome investigative and judicial system. |
|
We question whether plaintiff may obtain personal jurisdiction over the defendant in this judicial district. |
|
The adjudicator is not exercising the residual jurisdiction of judicial review. |
|
Unlike wealthier women whose cases I have seen in Cologne, these working class women did not hint at the bogusness of male judicial authority. |
|
It also has a judicial system strong on execution and mutilation, just like the Romans. |
|
In the judicial realm, originalism is an intellectual backstop for conservative social policies. |
|
The whole course of this area of jurisprudence is that similar functions can be discharged both on an executive basis and a judicial basis. |
|
|
There should not have been an application for legal aid to apply for judicial review whilst that remedy was available. |
|
This may seem to imply that judicial review no longer serves a legitimate purpose and should be abandoned. |
|
And that judicial consensus mirrors the consensus we have grown in the hearts and minds of the American people. |
|
It may, your Honour, but we would put it in terms of once you have reached that point, you are identifying unlawfulness and not merely judicial perception of abuse. |
|
Doran has no judicial experience and is the former executive director of the North Carolina Institute for constitutional law. |
|
A judicial inquiry, however, has power to gather evidence, to summon the trio, and invigilate them properly and professionally. |
|
A typical instance of mutilation of a notable literary work to serve commercial interest had come up in a judicial court recently over a TV serial. |
|
So far, efforts to combat corruption have been unfruitful due to the lack of political will, loopholes in existing laws and regulations and corrupt judicial officers. |
|
Schmitt, in short, relocated the quest for determinate answers to legal questions from the rules themselves to the activities of judicial decision-makers. |
|
Australia has given more than one million dollars to help the process along and it could still be asked to supply judicial muscle to the international tribunal. |
|
In American jurisprudence this is called judicial legislation. |
|
Even many radically liberal activists in the United States believe that their agenda should be put into force by suasion and democracy rather than judicial fiat. |
|
What the high court has done, however, is to at least bring the torturers within the orbit of the law, subject to some form of accountability and judicial restraint. |
|
According to the Quran, the highest political authorities are subject to judicial review. |
|
He has been convicted of murder and is awaiting execution on death row while the US judicial and political system plays Russian roulette with his life. |
|
The decision of the Commissioner to refuse leave is subject to the supervisory jurisdiction of the High Court exercised in judicial review proceedings. |
|
Consequently, a tendency towards undervaluation of assets resulted and was increasingly implied if not endorsed, occasionally by judicial opinions. |
|
After all, even the vicious and unredeemable are entitled to the protections the judicial system is supposed to provide. |
|
All questions were to be stonewalled, on the logical grounds that any comment would prejudice the judicial inquiry set to be announced by the Ministry of Defence. |
|
In the case of a continuing wrong done to him, a prisoner could expect that a hearing in judicial review proceedings could be obtained with little delay. |
|
|
The judicial system resembles that of other common law jurisdictions. |
|
The presumption is rebuttable but absent judicial or attorney error, it's almost impossible. |
|
Georgette Gagnon is the Africa director at Human Rights Watch and a former U.N. judicial adviser in Afghanistan. |
|
The legal battle involved a public inquiry and two judicial reviews. |
|
The FSLN National Directorate, like a Communist Party politburo, was the sole entity governing both the instruments of coercion and the judicial system. |
|
In fact, Lau believes that cases of sexual assault do not belong in a university, but in the extant legal and judicial systems. |
|
But having said all of that, the very strong judicial disposition, worked out over a long time and in cases that far precede me, take a contrary view. |
|
I have never heard of a judicial officer saying to a select committee that they want more jobs, better conditions, better pay, and all those things that flow from it. |
|
Twenty-nine consecutive judicial decisions in the past year have held bans on gay marriage are unconstitutional. |
|
Power is separated into legislative, executive, and judicial branches. |
|
It does seem that when it comes to the control orders, there'll now be an interim control order, and then there'll be judicial review on the merits of that control order. |
|
Such judicial power has been interpreted to include the power to review and invalidate, based on unconstitutionality, both federal and state actions. |
|
It is for this reason that the one-person-one-vote decision, while appealing in democratic terms, seems to me a form of illegitimate judicial activism. |
|
Black people are tense because they are sick and tired of being subjected to what they see as a prejudiced judicial system. |
|
The judicial consensus in favor of the freedom to marry is unambiguous, bipartisan, and unprecedented. |
|
It does, of course, include many such rules and decisions and these can be found, paradigmatically, in statute books, judicial decisions and, of course, written constitutions. |
|
The punishments were handed out on Thursday in Sydney after a four-hour disciplinary hearing led by the International Rugby Board's judicial officer Brian McLaughlin. |
|
The judicial system remains weighted in favour of the police. |
|
This sort of undertaking is not an exercise in constitutional interpretation but an act of judicial willfulness that has no logical stopping point. |
|
Non-consensual federalization of troops must be done under the banner of preserving judicial authority or due process, rather than for the purpose of preserving law and order. |
|
|
So with Anderson's help he can parade himself before the IOC as having his hands tied by judicial process when pleading Australia is not soft on drugs in sport. |
|
Rather than overturn Roe v. Wade, he proposes to overturn the entire system of judicial review. |
|
There are numerous such mechanisms, which range from determining the scope and nature of judicial jurisdiction to the setting of judicial salaries. |
|
In short, the decision is as pure an example of judicial activism as one could hope to find. |
|
Kagan's nomination is a triumph for liberal ideology and judicial activism. |
|
If the legislature acts to protect the poor and less powerful, its actions must be respected by the judicial branch. |
|
Now opponents of judicial activism can offer all sorts of arguments why this is supposedly a bad thing. |
|
Rules of evidence, judicial procedure, and ethical standards have all been tightened and reformed since Darrow's heyday. |
|
Roberts knows just how hard won the current authority of the judicial branch has been and the stakes remain high. |
|
Accordingly, the duty owed under Section 17 of the Children Act 1989 is a target duty owed to children in general and is not justiciable by judicial review. |
|
That level of judicial activism, in a context like this one, would be nearly unprecedented. |
|
Magistrates threw out this appeal in October, but objectors are currently considering taking the bench's decision to judicial review at the High Court. |
|
Much of these two basic tenets was retained after the United States of America won independence from Britain, and received some judicial recognition in the US Supreme Court. |
|
True, Eisenhower had despatched federal troops to Little Rock to enforce a judicial order. |
|
There are three applications for judicial review before the court. |
|
Only the judicial system can properly adjudicate criminal guilt. |
|
But more than 200 years later, the disruptive potential of judicial review remained on full display. |
|
It's patently designed to pour scorn on the English judicial process and courtroom procedure as unreliable systems, leading guiltless men to end up in prison. |
|
No wonder that the unitarist legal order of the modern state, with its centralized legislative, executive and judicial institutions, evolved in England. |
|
The appellant applied for judicial review to quash this decision. |
|