How To Use Judicially In A Sentence

  • Judicially speaking, injury and larceny are both crimes against the State, but in these criminal categories it is possible to identify particular victims.
  • HOLDING: (Opinion by Landau, P.J.) – A public employee who prevails on a lawsuit by asserting that the claim did not arise during the course of employment is judicially estopped from initiating an action against the employer for indemnity of legal expenses by asserting a position inconsistent with that asserted during the original claim. One less bell to answer (Jack Bog's Blog)
  • -- That this expresses a positive divine act, by which those who wilfully close their eyes and harden their hearts against the truth are judicially shut up in their unbelief and impenitence, is admitted by all candid critics [as Olshausen], though many of them think it necessary to contend that this is in no way inconsistent with the liberty of the human will, which of course it is not. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • The 9/11 attacks did lead to some expansion of executive authority, most notably in bypassing procedures set up in 1978 to ensure that electronic surveillance is judicially authorized.
  • Even if the amendment is passed it can be defeated judicially.
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  • In actual world, the most administrative acts have not been reviewed by the judicial bodies and one part of them have not been effectively judicially controlled owing to their features.
  • judicially controlled process
  • Then a man could study its customs with undivided soul; but being so very near next door, he goes about the land with one eye on the smoke of the flesh-pots of the old country across the seas, while with the other he squints biliously and prejudicially at the alien. American Notes
  • First, Chapter III speaks of matters being adjudicated judicially, thus, according to law.
  • Not all judicially created laws are based on statutory or constitutional interpretation.
  • Strictly speaking, this seems more in the nature of an emphatic moral denunciation, or a religious curse, than a legal sanction capable of being formally applied in an individual case and after judicial trial, -- though the sentence of _atimy_, under the more elaborated Attic procedure, was both definite in its penal consequences and also judicially delivered. The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 01
  • 'This boy,' said Imam Din judicially, 'is a _budmash_ -- a big The Kipling Reader Selections from the Books of Rudyard Kipling
  • CO2 has just been judicially legislated from a perfectly natural element of our atmosphere necessary for life on Earth to a "pollutant. Balkinization
  • Unfortunately, there's no reversing a factual error entrenched in legislation judicially.
  • Not all judicially created laws are based on statutory or constitutional interpretation.
  • But those who, upon a bare profession, pronounce a notour (400) malignant a friend, having no proof of his integrity, and will not have any judged such, but such as judicially are debarred, yet contrary to all the testimony of works and fruits, judge and condemn honest men as traitors, though not judicially convicted. The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning
  • Once findings have been made, everybody must thereafter approach the case on the basis of the facts as judicially found.
  • The Court of Appeals held that Hallberg was judicially estopped from indemnity from Portland because his claim was factually inconsistent with claims he made defending the previous suit on which he had prevailed. One less bell to answer (Jack Bog's Blog)
  • The discretion to deprive a successful litigant of costs is one which must be exercised judicially and upon proper material connected with the case.
  • Some individual is selected, and often selected very injudicially, as the representative of every great movement of the public mind, of every great revolution in human affairs; and on this individual are concentrated all the love and all the hatred, all the admiration and all the contempt, which he ought rightfully to share with a whole party, a whole sect, a whole nation, a whole generation. Miscellaneous Writings and Speeches — Volume 2
  • By ‘judicially vindicable rights,’ I assume Matt means individual rights, for otherwise states could claim they had rights under the Ninth and Tenth Amendments.
  • Meanwhile, Joel Connelly, the contumelious liberal columnist for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer is crying foul because the two highly qualified and judicially restrained challengers, Stephen Johnson and John Groen, are receiving campaign contributions from folks whom Connelly doesn't approve of: "Outside interests influencing court races". Sound Politics: Chief Justice Alexander is "Very Well Qualified" to legislate from the bench
  • England instead of despotic Russia, it is doubtful if he could work out his discovery of the electrotype -- we say _doubtful_; for, as far as we can learn, it seems hitherto judicially undecided whether the mere use of a patent, not for sale or a lucrative object, is such a use within the statute of James as would be an infringement of a patentee's rights. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, No. CCCXXXVI. October, 1843. Vol. LIV.
  • Storm in a provincial tea-cup as British 'bobbies' go extra-judicially ballistic over alleged 'kiddie porn' yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = 'Storm in a provincial tea-cup as British \'bobbies\' go extra-judicially ballistic over alleged \'kiddie porn\ ''; yahooBuzzArticleSummary = 'Article: The challenge, which is presently under review by the Chief Constable of Lincolnshire (England) has its origins in a claim by a community administrator in a rural riverside community on the border between Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire that a local photo-journalist had "pandered to pedophilia" by taking a photograph during an award ceremony at the local community center to which the "press" had been invited ...' Storm in a provincial tea-cup as British 'bobbies' go extra-judicially ballistic over alleged 'kiddie porn'
  • And these things -- for example, the role of ELF-Aquitaine, which is a partly-owned French company, is now under investigation judicially in France because of all the payoffs and so on that are involved. Press Briefing By Africa Scholars
  • On the other hand, the Court was convinced that judicially imposed hybrid rulemaking requirements would impose real costs.
  • When it comes time to argue in the Israeli forum, there is nothing in that brief that would “judicially estop” him from investing “some of his charm and charisma in wooing the Israeli public.” The Volokh Conspiracy » Only 6% of Jewish Israelis think Obama is Pro-Israel,
  • The trial judge's verdict in my view, satisfies the test that a properly instructed trier of fact, acting judicially, could reasonably have rendered the same verdict.
  • 'Maybe I do, and maybe I do not,' answered Peter; 'I am no free to answer every body's interrogatory, unless it is put judicially, and by form of law -- specially where folk think so much of a caup of sour yill, or a thimblefu' of brandy. Redgauntlet
  • Mandatory lifers who have not yet had a tariff fixed will now have to wait until the new legislation is in place to have their tariffs judicially set.
  • I am aware of the effects of disputes tribunals - particularly in the agricultural sector - and they are not always as judicially objective as they might be.
  • The Government also suggests that a second Baker factor justifies our finding that this case is nonjusticiable: the Court could not fashion “judicially manageable standards” for determining either whether a bill is “for raising Revenue” or where a bill “originates.” The Volokh Conspiracy » Does Marshall Field v. Clark Preclude a Challenge to “Deem and Pass”?
  • What was the amount of theological divergence which was conveyed by these terms Arian and Catholic, or to speak more judicially Theodoric the Goth Barbarian Champion of Civilisation

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