「plaintiff」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 241件
et Journal Europe Eady ruled in favor of the | plaintiff, a Saudi Arabian banker. |
The | plaintiff, a pregnant woman who was given the pseudony |
The | plaintiff, a citizen of Missouri, prosecuted his claim |
patory evidence, asserting that "denying the | plaintiff access to potentially powerful exculpatory e |
Mr. Nettleship, the | plaintiff, agreed to teach Mrs Weston, the defendant, |
The | plaintiff, Airlines of New South Wales, had applied un |
Plaintiff Alfa Corp. sought to introduce the expert te | |
“The | plaintiff, Alfa Corporation (“Alfa Corp.”), is a finan |
lve small amounts of damages," and where the | plaintiff alleges that "the party with the superior ba |
A | plaintiff alleging predatory buying must therefore pro |
n who denies that he was ever married to the | plaintiff, although all records have been destroyed du |
New York Times - THE SUPREME COURT: THE | PLAINTIFF; An Unlikely Journey Up the Legal Ladder - B |
f a personal profile with nude photos of the | Plaintiff and her contact information. |
g evidence, the court found in favour of the | plaintiff and awarded damages against the ship's maste |
the actual or potential harm suffered by the | plaintiff and the punitive damages award. |
Lord Cottenham found in favour of the | plaintiff and granted an injunction to restrain the de |
he amount for attorney fees is income to the | plaintiff and the attorney who is eventually paid. |
rk State Supreme Court reversed a ruling for | plaintiff and former Schenectady, New York fireman, Ja |
Jury Verdict Research, a database of | plaintiff and defense verdicts, says awards in medical |
The jury reaches a verdict for the | plaintiff and awards compensatory damages of one dolla |
nstructed the jury to find a verdict for the | plaintiff, and the defendant excepted to such instruct |
subsidiaries of Exxon Mobil Corporation (the | plaintiff and petitioner in this matter) formed a join |
the country - lawyer Rienzie Arseculeratne ( | Plaintiff) and Emeritus Professor of Paediatrics, Priy |
horough framework of protection for both the | plaintiff and the defendant. |
which case the property was restored to the | plaintiff, and the question of true ownership was deal |
parties, the possession of the claim by the | plaintiff, and the subsequent wrongful entry of the de |
Woodbury and Harriman replace the county as | plaintiff and reopen the case, declaring that the comm |
case, the firm had literally overwhelmed the | plaintiff and the court with paper, so that "[f]ive th |
to the judgment, the county settled with the | plaintiff and other bondholders, by giving them new bo |
he evidence that the transaction between the | plaintiff and the defendant was a sale of food, or a c |
e principal baritone parts of Counsel to the | Plaintiff and later the Learned Judge in Trial by Jury |
The | plaintiff, Antiquesportfolio.com, wished to set up a b |
The | plaintiff appealed to the general term, which affirmed |
The | plaintiff applied to the High Court, arguing that the |
The | plaintiff argued that he was entitled to recover for t |
The claim was designated by the | plaintiff as "The Hawk Lode" mining claim, and by the |
, which dismissed the complaint in which the | plaintiff asked for recovery in the sum of $1,050 with |
ter Katrina, Hood partnered with Mississippi | plaintiff attorney Dickie Scruggs, a brother-in-law of |
th (born September 15, 1960) is a practicing | plaintiff attorney licensed in Louisiana. |
ertain representations of the defendant, the | plaintiff being an alien and not knowing the laws of t |
on county after several years delay that the | plaintiff believed that due to prejudice and local inf |
rrie was another of the banking firm and the | plaintiff bringing the action. |
Here, there was one single | plaintiff but many defendants (the putative owners of |
ent ought to be entered for (let us say) the | plaintiff, but to save the trouble and expense to the |
ly on the number of incidents alleged by the | plaintiff, but was to be based on a consideration of a |
The defendants profited from the | plaintiff by keying through the display of banner ads |
ident and sincere remorse on the part of the | plaintiff, calling the episode an "aberration in what |
n application of article 17 of the ECHR, the | plaintiff can't appeal to the protection of article 10 |
Plaintiff Cecilia Barnes made claims arising out of De | |
The | plaintiff challenged the constitutionality of the obsc |
In 1992, | plaintiff Cheryl Hopwood, a White American woman, sued |
Separate polls by the | plaintiff, Citizens United, and the Center for Competi |
The Court characterized the | plaintiff claim as a claim to the subject matter itsel |
of ancestor") was an action brought where a | plaintiff claimed the defendant had entered upon a fre |
By piling the manure into heaps, the | plaintiff claimed ownership in trover. |
Typically in a class action, it is a | plaintiff class that is certified: for example, a larg |
hirds or more of the members of all proposed | plaintiff classes in the aggregate and the primary def |
The judgment favoring the | plaintiff continued that it could still be held obscen |
Mr Harman urged that the | plaintiff could not recover damages for the loss of hi |
Under these conditions, the | plaintiff could not provide direct evidence as to whet |
kard, and a bully (when tipsy), and that the | Plaintiff could not have endured him even for a day; t |
, the design was clearly functional, and the | plaintiff could not carry the burden of proving otherw |
In debt the | plaintiff declares upon a lease for years rendering re |
he could not take the profits; whereupon the | plaintiff demurred, and the plea was resolved insuffic |
e suit was dropped shortly afterwards as the | plaintiff did not have any right to engage in a lawsui |
Plaintiff did so. | |
ion after several days of hospital stay, the | plaintiff discharged his daughter from the care of the |
its motion to stay proceedings and to compel | plaintiff employee to submit to arbitration his claim |
is improvements if the court should hold the | plaintiff entitled to recover. |
Plaintiff, Faith Temple Church (Faith Temple), brought | |
Plaintiff filed a timely notice of appeal. | |
y either defending the city or acting as the | plaintiff for the city in all civil lawsuits. |
The defendant was indebted to the | plaintiff for the sum of at least one million and nine |
d on the fact that the defendant had, at the | plaintiff's request, tendered £5-2s-6d before the debt |
ed as if the principle being well known, the | plaintiff had first invented a mode of applying it. |
was an action to recover lands of which the | plaintiff had been disseised, or dispossessed. |
Rather, the | plaintiff had to show that Congress was preventing vio |
d as if, the principle being well known, the | plaintiff had first invented a mode of applying it by |
After the | plaintiff had offered in evidence the coupons sued upo |
The | plaintiff had "improved" what was otherwise a nuisance |
Motion by the | plaintiff, Handly's lessee, to eject inhabitants of a |
The anonymous | plaintiff has since been identified as Sandra Cano, a |
cted the ruling of the first trial since the | plaintiff has already lost interest in requesting the |
for misappropriation begins to run when the | plaintiff has any reason to suspect that the third par |
2151, 150 L.Ed.2d 272 (2001), | Plaintiff has alleged facts amounting to a federal con |
Punitive damages for the | plaintiff have often been awarded as a result of a suc |
of them, acting without authority, told the | plaintiff he had been accepted. |
The | plaintiff, Henry Williams, had been indicted for murde |
petitioners now show to this court that the | plaintiff herein, Milo F. Kellogg, is a citizen of the |
4i v. Microsoft: McKool Smith represents the | plaintiff, i4i, in ongoing patent infringement actions |
claim for damages against the foreign libel | plaintiff, if they acted to deprive an American of the |
Irvine was the | plaintiff in the Supreme Court case Irvine v. Sims's L |
She also recorded the | Plaintiff in Trial by Jury (1927), though she never pl |
He was the | plaintiff in Macpherson v. Department of Administrativ |
WEACT served as lead | plaintiff in a lawsuit filed against the city, which w |
ary 24, 1656, Joannes Nevius appeared as the | plaintiff in a suit against Pieter van Couwenhoven for |
In the 1980s, Cody's was a | plaintiff in several anti-trust lawsuits charging that |
He was counsel for the | plaintiff in the case of Wilkes v. Wood, and made a br |
She served as the lead | plaintiff in the successful landmark lawsuit against G |
was the state auditor of Ohio who served as | plaintiff in the Supreme Court case Osborn v. Bank of |
, and Dickey Betts, Butch Trucks is named as | plaintiff in a lawsuit against UMG Recordings. |
t in no way shares a market segment with the | plaintiff in no way dilutes the plaintiff's brand name |
d to the federal bench, Hunter ruled for the | plaintiff in a case that opened all-white McNeese Stat |
able to be identified in court papers as the | plaintiff in the case and instead was referred to as " |
nd, the only elected official to have been a | plaintiff in the 2006 U.S. Supreme Court review of the |
series of Gilbert & Sullivan operettas: the | Plaintiff in Trial by Jury, Mabel in The Pirates of Pe |
It showed that it would involve the | plaintiff in a multiplicity of suits as to title of lo |
He served as a | plaintiff in the ISKCON and Brian Rumbaugh v. Walter L |
e company's centenary season, she played the | Plaintiff in Trial by Jury, Princess Nekaya in Utopia |
Mountain and Southern Railroad Company, the | plaintiff in error, is not the identical corporation w |
of New York City making the argument for the | plaintiff in error on October 18, 1925. |
and was a member of the legal counsel of the | plaintiff in Idaho Potato Growers v. Ruben, the case i |
Mitsuye Endo, the | plaintiff in the case, was evacuated from Sacramento, |
apanese American Redress, Hohri was the lead | plaintiff in a lawsuit that sought $27 billion in dama |
ed in the honor of Roberto Alvarez, the lead | plaintiff in the court case. |
ing full knowledge that he has no title, the | plaintiff, in an action for the breach of such agreeme |
ndoliers, and soon took over the role of The | Plaintiff in Trial by Jury, winning a favourable revie |
rywall, and Payton eventually became a named | plaintiff in a widely-reported class action lawsuit ag |
FBI and Department of Justice and became the | plaintiff in the lawsuit Doe v. Ashcroft (filed April |
the Guard, Josephine in H.M.S. Pinafore, the | Plaintiff in Trial by Jury, and Yum-Yum in The Mikado. |
O'Bannon was named as the lead | plaintiff in a lawsuit filed against the National Coll |
ess, or negligence, and intending no harm to | plaintiff in what he did, we should hesitate to hold t |
intentional targeting of his actions at the | plaintiff in the forum state", which he viewed the Fre |
From 1980-1983 Duren was a lead | plaintiff in the domestic spying lawsuit CAPA v. Gates |
shown as his participation as an intervening | plaintiff in litigation that ultimately resulted in th |
its determination, and that consequently the | plaintiff in error was not entitled to remove the suit |
The | plaintiff in this case is the defendant's mother. |
We find for the | plaintiff in the sum of (,000) five thousand dollars, |
Douglas Spector, | plaintiff in Spector v. Norwegian Cruise Line Ltd. |
M. Greene, founder of Free the Vote NC, is a | plaintiff in the lawsuit along with the primary plaint |
Godfrey was subsequently the | plaintiff in a variety of other internet-based libel s |
She was the | plaintiff in the Supreme Court Case Clark County Schoo |
Judge Melvin was | plaintiff in the case of Melvin v. Doe (575 Pa. |
The | plaintiff insisted that the first and second sections |
While the lawyers of the | plaintiff insisted that Karvatko was pressured by the |
To the contrary, where the | plaintiff is a private individual, the speech is priva |
atest speech protection is imposed where the | plaintiff is a public figure, the speech is of public |
a fide use of the "EDGE" mark in commerce by | plaintiff, its licensees, or its predecessors in inter |
The | plaintiff, Jackson W. Giles, sued on behalf of more th |
suit was brought in federal court in Oregon; | plaintiff John Doe alleged abuse by Father Andrew Rona |
American Boychoir (representing | plaintiff John Hardwicke) Pending |
The | plaintiff, Jordaan Michael Clarke, underwent successfu |
civil settlement of over $15 million to the | plaintiff Jordan Chandler. |
The | plaintiff, Joseph Hayden, a former incarcerated felon |
Also referred to as a | plaintiff lawyer, a personal injury lawyer is responsi |
he South Australian branch of the Australian | Plaintiff Lawyers' Association. |
The | plaintiff litigation group included, among others, Irv |
tinct practice areas: a business group and a | plaintiff litigation group. |
The lower court ruled in the | plaintiff Livermore's favor, to which the defendant Wa |
nt who also paid the purchase price with the | plaintiff making no financial contributions to the pur |
The | plaintiff, Marketing Display, Inc., held a patent on a |
As reported by the | plaintiff Maury in a letter (Dec. |
e none of the above methods are effective, a | plaintiff may effect service under the Virginia long a |
In such cases, "the | plaintiff may seek to sue concurrently or alternativel |
r with substantial experience and success in | plaintiff medical malpractice cases, joined the firm. |
igan-Southern Division derives its name from | plaintiff Megan Daugherty and four other parents who a |
The | plaintiff, Mrs Williams, gave evidence at the Hereford |
at sexually suggestive behavior occurred-the | plaintiff must show that the employer could have taken |
r which redress is sought, and therefore the | plaintiff must allege and prove, not merely that they |
gust 10, 1897; Delaney ruled in favor of the | plaintiff, O. H. Adsit, who would go on to be mayor of |
en Patty realizes this, she decides to use a | plaintiff of the UNR lawsuit to stop what could happen |
fell from a second-story window and hit the | plaintiff on his head. |
ing Captain Corcoran and the Counsel for the | Plaintiff on the Company's 1949 Decca LP recordings of |
the right of possession of the claim by the | plaintiff on the 17th of June, 1880, is by virtue of i |
roviso as a passenger, and gave judgment for | plaintiff on the verdict. |
February, but they have all settled with the | plaintiff or had the lawsuit dismissed. |
61 was not presented or argued by either the | plaintiff or respondent, and thus was not before the C |
Samuel Keeble (the | plaintiff) owned property called Minott's Meadow, whic |
The | plaintiff owned two ships that were moored nearby. |
money, and instead of suing for damages the | plaintiff paid the money. |
s from Browder, Russell left the firm as the | plaintiff personal injury practice, still headed by Mr |
On the above facts, the | plaintiff prayed the court to rule that the manure was |
Attorneys for the | plaintiff, Ralph Gingles, included Julius Chambers, La |
It was admitted that the | plaintiff received the injury "through the gross negli |
(Judge Barbara Salesch) was shown, where the | plaintiff, Regina Zindler, accused her neighbour becau |
often cited and used as precedent where the | plaintiff's claim is frivolous because it has no basis |
out of the state, venue is proper where the | plaintiff resides (but not simply where the plaintiff |
Plaintiff Rick Jacobs of Courage Campaign said that "P | |
Logically, if the | plaintiff said they would have had the operation anywa |
ndent School District in the 1970s, in which | plaintiff Sam Tasby charged that the Dallas ISD was st |
He stated that a | plaintiff seeking a declaration to invalidate a law mu |
If, for example, the | plaintiff seeks $3,000 and recovers $2,960, the plaint |
ction, Hall would have held that: "[W]here a | plaintiff seeks ejectment damages, rather than restora |
gned the settlement to a good friend and the | plaintiff settles for $3 million without a trial. |
ed when the Court of Appeal decided that the | plaintiff should have filed an electoral petition inst |
lity for their having been left behind; each | plaintiff sought ¥33 million. |
Using this argument base, the | plaintiff successfully raised enough issues of fact un |
The | plaintiff sued the defendant for the sum of £8 10s. |
., 113 U.S. 218 (1885), was a case where the | plaintiff sued the defendant for the loss of her husba |
The | Plaintiff sued for loss of time and expense. |
The | plaintiff sued for trade dress infringement based on c |
ly, Coupe and the district's counsel advised | Plaintiff that references to God as they related to Pl |
The | plaintiff therefore prays judgment for the possession |
As co-counsel for the | plaintiff, they argued the Sonny Bono Copyright Term E |
ll aspects of the graduation ceremony, asked | Plaintiff to submit a draft of his speech. |
In order for a | plaintiff to obtain a default judgment, she must apply |
While the ability of a | plaintiff to succeed on such a claim in district court |
fining what it means, under the PSLRA, for a | plaintiff to sufficiently plead a "strong inference" o |
ce, or contract, would of itself entitle the | plaintiff to an injunction." |
urka later described Hopwood as "the perfect | plaintiff to question the fairness of reverse discrimi |
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