「Chancery」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Chancery

1 2 次へ>

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:341件

  • was the office of the chancellor, head of the chancery, a non-permanent writing office.
  • ks included being the seminary librarian, the chancery administrator and also the secretary for past
  • The Brymbo ironworks are bought out of Chancery after a long period of litigation and reopene
  • ged with others with contempt of the Court of Chancery after a public meeting critical of Smith but
  • rvonshire, unsuccessfully brings an action in Chancery against Thomas James, Lord Bulkeley, claiming
  • Elwell died at his residence in the chancery, aged 69.
  • In 1839 he was appointed a Master in Chancery, an office he held until 1853.
  • became an authorised reporter at the Court of Chancery and was the author of "Kay's Reports" and par
  • tor, later becoming Registrar in the Court of Chancery and living in West Lodge, Pinner in Middlesex
  • as gaoler to the Exchequer of Pleas, Court of Chancery and Star Chamber as part of his duties the Wa
  • Thavie's Inn was the second oldest Inn of Chancery, and was founded around 1349.
  • anxious to curtail the delays in the Court of Chancery, and to improve the lighting and paving of th
  • About this time he was made a master in chancery, and was one of nine civilians who drew up an
  • In 1982, he was appointed Head of Chancery and Consul-General in Tel Aviv, Israel and wo
  • ver of the Exchequer for Yorkshire, Master in Chancery, and Recorder for Kingston upon Hull.
  • nspector of forests, as Clerk of the Crown in Chancery and as commissioner with respect to the depar
  • He then became a ward of Chancery and was raised in England as a Protestant.
  • available source of information -- registers, chancery, and probate, in the London courts, proved fr
  • He distinguished himself in the courts of chancery, and was briefly attorney-general to Queen Ad
  • presided over by John Taylor to hear cases in chancery, and on the following 3 November he was retur
  • The Chancery and its growing powers soon came to be resent
  • The case went to the Court of Chancery and took decades to resolve, sapping much of
  • who had sold positions to several Masters of Chancery and who, in an attempt to regain the high cos
  • Mass, and her children were taken as wards in Chancery and brought up in the Church of England.
  • l accounting system was involved in the papal chancery; and a budget was apparently prepared, one pa
  • Clifford's Inn was an Inn of Chancery, and stands between Fetter Lane and Clifford'
  • held a variety of positions in the Pittsburgh chancery and was named a monsignor in 1968.
  • as they were fairly autonomous with their own chancery and minting facilities.
  • urned to Madrid in 1979, initially as Head of Chancery and then as Commercial Counsellor from 1980 t
  • 5 to 1316 he served as keeper of the rolls of chancery, and from 1307 he was the master of the Domus
  • 1997, after serving eight years as an elected chancery and probate court judge for Pulaski and Perry
  • te son of William Pennyman (d1628) a Clerk in Chancery and was educated at Christ Church College, Ox
  • of the same rule of law in those cases where chancery and common law recognised different rules.
  • the early part of 1537 he became a master in chancery, and throughout 1538, 1539, and 1540 he was e
  • Irby was a Master in Chancery, and was appointed recorder of Boston in 1613
  • The records of the chancery are now located in the state archives of Hano
  • an Missile Crisis), Greece, Tokyo (as Head of Chancery), as Counsellor in Bonn and in Algiers, Consu
  • ilding is intended to integrate well with the Chancery, as well as with the Megaron Mousikis (Athens
  • ty-six pages, called ‘The Jurisdiction of the Chancery as a Court of Equity researched,' 8vo, London
  • Masson served as Master in Chancery at Owen Sound from 1873 to 1885.
  • He was Head of Chancery at the British Embassy in Washington DC from
  • St. Mary's Cathedral and its diocesan chancery at 607 NE Madison St.
  • necticut, includes St. Volodymyr Cathedral, a chancery at 14 Peveril Road in Stamford, St. Basil Col
  • One building houses the chancery, Australia's permanent missions to UNESCO and
  • He practised at the Chancery Bar and was appointed Queen's Counsel in 1858
  • From 1958 to 1986 he practised at the Chancery Bar and was examiner and lecturer in practica
  • Practicing at the chancery bar, Cottenham's progress was slow, and it wa
  • a 57 year old barrister who practiced at the Chancery Bar.
  • (20 June 1911-6 February 2006) was an English Chancery barrister and judge, ultimately of the House
  • The Court of Appeal in Chancery became part of England's Court of Appeal, whi
  • wo copies of every publication printed to the Chancery before the material was distributed.
  • Referring to the late plea in Chancery between Amicia (sic) wife of Thomas, late lor
  • enure, Hannan oversaw the construction of the Chancery building and Saint Plus X Seminary.
  • f the Mission Dolores Basilica Center and the Chancery Building of the Archdiocese of San Francisco
  • ted since 1960 in the American Embassy London Chancery Building, in Grosvenor Square, Westminster, L
  • They sold the chancery building, St. Vincent Center, and the surroun
  • During his tenure, he built a new chancery building, expanded Immaculata Minor Seminary,
  • ron Rich] was ill, he helped to clear off the chancery business.
  • s named chancellor of the New Jersey court of chancery by Governor Robert Stockton Green, and he was
  • edit documents relating to the Irish court of chancery by the records commissioners for Ireland, but
  • n 1897 and took silk in 1913, specialising in Chancery cases.
  • d to the Bar at Gray's Inn in 1970, joining a Chancery chambers, practising in trust law, property l
  • He was a Master in chancery, Circuit Court of Cook County from 1919 to 19
  • an actuary for the courts, administrator and chancery clerk.
  • in Munich, and his eventual installation as a chancery clerk.
  • istrict, former cabinet Minister for Welfare, Chancery, Colonies and Consolidation, of the Provincia
  • Bell gave extended evidence to the Chancery Commissioners in 1824-5, and published Though
  • Salisbury pursued a case in the High Court of Chancery concerning his wife's marriage portion under
  • Cases from the Court of Appeal in Chancery could be further appealed to the House of Lor
  • had lost a leg in the American Civil War and Chancery Court judge, he did not seek re-election and
  • rth left the firm to became chancellor of the chancery court of Michigan and with the addition of Sa
  • transferred two years later to a post in the chancery court at Valladolid.
  • ed as Chancellor of the third division of the chancery court from 1893 to 1899.
  • June - The Chancery court agrees the sale of the Kinmel estate to
  • n 1915 by Judge Hugh A. Locke, a judge of the Chancery Court and president of the Birmingham Bar Ass
  • He was a Chancellor of the First Chancery Court of Mississippi from 1924 to 1929.
  • He filed complaints in the Chancery Court and these were still unsettled two year
  • Chancery Court records show that in 1667 he stated on
  • 1874, those trustees commenced a suit in the Chancery Court of Montgomery County, Alabama, against
  • battle Dr Pitt was reported missing; then the Chancery Court took charge of his estate and refused t
  • He was appointed chancellor of the First Chancery Court in 1907 and served in that capacity unt
  • obia, where she worked as a court reporter in chancery court for two years.
  • ober 31, a related suit was filed in Delaware Chancery Court by minority shareholders in DMT.
  • ), and gained renown for his ability to argue chancery court cases.
  • of Representatives in 1846 and a judge of the chancery court in 1847.
  • HB1348 - Human Rights - Adds Davidson County chancery court as venue for persons seeking a court or
  • Menzies served as a judge of the chancery court from 1873 to 1893 and afterwards resume
  • Chancery Court Hotel, London is situated in one of the
  • The Tennessee Supreme Court upheld the chancery court's ruling, and Knoxville Iron appealed t
  • In 1880 he was appointed to Louisville's Chancery Court, and in 1884, with the support of emerg
  • 5, 2011, he announced his retirement from the Chancery Court.
  • 839-1841 as chancellor of the Middle Division Chancery Court.
  • constable, sheriff and deputy marshall of the chancery court.
  • n he was elected judge of the Davidson County Chancery Court.
  • aac's real estate, and Newton resorted to the Chancery courts to get satisfaction.
  • Mississippi Chancery Courts
  • He practised in the Exchequer and Chancery courts, becoming counsel to Oxford University
  • The Court of Chancery decided in 1693 that Balliol should receive t
  • Under a Chancery Decree that same year, he acquired Bowood Hou
  • (PRO, Chancery depositions)
  • He served as judge of the sixth chancery district from 1897 until his resignation in 1
  • He later served successively as master in chancery, district attorney, and member of the Michiga
  • ish High Court and in 1904 transferred to the Chancery Division where he served until his retirement
  • All three had served in the Chancery Division of the High Court.
  • ary 1929 was knighted and made a judge of the Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice.
  • Nicholas Stewart QC, for the High Court Chancery Division gave judgment on 15 February 2001.
  • In 1886 he became a judge in the Chancery Division of the High Court, and was knighted
  • exercising judicial review), judges from the Chancery Division and the Family Division of the High
  • in divisions: the Queen's Bench Division, the Chancery Division and the Family Division.
  • atents Court is a specialist court within the Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice of Engl
  • as Vice-Chancellor (the effective head of the Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice) in 200
  • In 1907 he was appointed to be a judge in the Chancery Division and he served in that capacity until
  • as elevated to the bench as land judge in the Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice in Irel
  • rister and an English High Court judge in the Chancery Division from 1915 to 1922.
  • 2 November 1915 he was created a judge of the Chancery Division having not long previously been crea
  • old Danckwerts was appointed a Justice of the Chancery Division of the High Court of England and Wal
  • Uthwatt was nominated a Judge of the Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice in 1941
  • of the United States and judge of the second chancery division of Tennessee.
  • The Chancery Division of the Court of Appeal held that Bro
  • 985 and a Judge of the High Court of Justice, Chancery Division from 1985 to 1992.
  • He was an English High Court judge ( Chancery Division) from 1881 to 1890, and a Lord Justi
  • alker was appointed a High Court Judge in the Chancery Division, and as is customary was created a K
  • igh Court judge in April 1995, and joined the Chancery Division, mainly hearing cases in the Patents
  • a judge of the English High Court of Justice, Chancery Division, since 1994.
  • female High Court judge to be assigned to the Chancery Division, the year after Dame Ann Ebsworth be
  • In the Chancery Division, 'With his Dundreary whiskers, his m
  • cuments relating to a case in the High Court, Chancery Division, between Rev Joel Mallinson (brother
  • d a High Court judge in 2001, assigned to the Chancery Division, and was kinghted shortly after.
  • He was a judge on the Chancery Division, Circuit Court of Cook County, Illin
  • ce of the High Court in 1988, assigned to the Chancery Division, and received the customary knightho
  • ompanies Court", referring to the High Court, Chancery Division, when exercising its jurisdiction fo
  • tween 1915 and 1919, he was High Court Judge, Chancery Division.
  • High Court of Justice in 1981, serving in the Chancery Division.
  • en he was named Chancellor of the former 12th Chancery Division.
  • female High Court judge to be assigned to the Chancery Division.
  • d Chancellor ceased to be titular head of the Chancery Division; Morritt became the first Chancellor
  • Justice on 3 October 2005 and assigned to the Chancery Division; he was knighted the same year.
  • are also Divisional Courts of the Family and Chancery Divisions to deal with certain cases.
  • first appears in the historical record in the chancery during the reign of King Henry III of England
  • While John Fortescue wrote of ten Inns of Chancery, each one attached to an Inn of Court "like M
  • It is believed that the Inns of Chancery evolved in tandem with the Inns of Court.
  • he italic, based upon Ludovico Arrighi's 1520 chancery face, was drawn by Frederic Warde, and is the
  • Bar by Lincoln's Inn and he practised in the Chancery field, specialising in intellectual property,
  • In 1834, he was named master in chancery for the Legislative Council of Newfoundland.
  • In 1988, he was appointed Head of Chancery for the British Embassy in Singapore, a posit
  • He served as master in chancery for Will County, Illinois, from 1884 to 1903.
  • London architect was the subject of a suit in Chancery, for William Smart, mason of Chichester, prov
  • He was a Standing Master in Chancery for the U.S. District Court for the Northern
  • He was also a commissioner in chancery for the Circuit Court of Arlington County, Vi
  • He served as master in chancery for Menard County from 1910 until his death i
  • dale and the corporation of Carlisle bills in chancery for the perpetuation of testimony, believing
  • He was a master in chancery for the United States District Court for the
  • curring in 1934, it was both the first Inn of Chancery founded, and the last, to be demolished.
  • However, Foss lists him as still a Master of Chancery from 1649 to 1650.
  • had taken notes of the cases in the court of Chancery from Hilary term 1736 to Michaelmas term 1754
  • f Recorder of Reading 1779-1807 and Master in Chancery from 1795 until 1808 when he became Senior Ma
  • He was educated at one of the Inns of Chancery from 1478 to 1480 before being admitted to Gr
  • n in 1978 and was the Junior Counsel to Crown Chancery from 1990-94.
  • He served as a Master in Chancery from 1826 to 1840 and between 1826 and 1830 h
  • He was a Master in Chancery from 1553, and was also MP for Steyning (26 O
  • provision for the future discharge of certain chancery functions entrusted by the said Conventions t
  • James Stephen (1758-1832), Master of Chancery, great-grandfather of Virginia Woolf.
  • Thus the Court of Chancery had a far greater remit than the common law c
  • ractice of training barristers at the Inns of Chancery had died out by 1642, and the Inns instead be
  • the Art Gallery of Alberta to the north-east, Chancery Hall and the Francis Winspear Centre for Musi
  • tituency covers the areas of Brandon Hill and Chancery Hall.
  • For the European style of writing, see Chancery hand.
  • Nearly 25 years later, a renovation of the chancery has now been completed.
  • etermined, an attorney at law or solicitor in chancery has a lien upon a judgment or decree obtained
  • eign de Brome was one of the King's Clerks of Chancery, he was twice ordered to take charge of the B
  • After lengthy litigation in the Court of Chancery, he was able to break the entail on most of h
  • phat Cathedral and chancellor of the eparchal chancery, he was appointed Apostolic administrator sed
  • ater, having been promoted to a Mastership in Chancery, he was sent as ambassador to the King of Pol
  • When he died a minor, the house passed into chancery; his mother Jane Lessingham bought it but soo
  • as created on 2 February 1976, and is kept at Chancery House in London.
  • He was also appointed a Master in Chancery in 1645.
  • Ada Clare - another ward of Chancery in Jarndyce and Jarndyce.
  • f Engineers from 1799 to 1802, as register in chancery in Annapolis, Maryland, and served throughout
  • He was admitted to the Court of Chancery in 1830.
  • He was appointed a Master in Chancery in 1812.
  • and a Clerk of the Peace and Local Master in Chancery in Essex.
  • He also established the Courts of Chancery in 1727 and was censured by the assembly.
  • He became auditor and commissioner in chancery in 1869 and resigned in 1870 to accept the ap
  • ffice, before moving to Madrid as Head of the Chancery in 1966.
  • He was then Counsellor and Head of Chancery in Bonn from 1988 to 1989.
  • the National Gallery of Canada, the Canadian Chancery in Washington D.C., the Vancouver Public Libr
  • d position of Vice-Chancellor of the Court of Chancery in 1812, since he was the senior chancery bar
  • He was acting Head of Chancery in Luxembourg in 1973 before returning later
  • nted Vice Chancellor of the Delaware Court of Chancery in 1989 and Chancellor in 1997.
  • ating the Divine Liturgy in the chapel of the Chancery in Knoxville, TN since May of 2008 at 10:00am
  • equer in 1834 and transferred to the Court of Chancery in 1841.
  • d to the bar in June 1894, and as a Master in Chancery in 1896.
  • of Essex and Suffolk, Keeper of the Rolls of Chancery in Ireland and a member of Edward IV's Privy
  • his office and residence at the Archdiocesan Chancery in Englewood, New Jersey, although he has a s
  • Cramer was appointed a master in chancery in 1805, and served as a member of the New Yo
  • f a light infantry company in 1806, master in chancery in 1808, recorder of the city 1809-1816, and
  • Walter was also prothonotary of the chancery in 1258; and on 12 July 1261 Henry III made h
  • as a court decision made by the High Court of Chancery in 1849, and began the development of confide
  • a Hanoverian minister and head of the German Chancery in London from 1723 until 1737.
1 2 次へ>