เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

clerk to the justices การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Mr Needham was previously Clerk to the Justices.
  • _Thomas said an increasing number of women and minorities are being hired as law clerks to the justices.
  • On the formation of the Wakefield Borough Commission in March 1870 he was elected clerk to the justices, an office which he retained until his death.
  • The office of justices clerk ( or clerk to the justices ) is historically linked with the development of the office of justice of the peace in England and Wales from the 12th century.
  • After being called to the bar, he practiced in and around London and became deputy clerk to the justices in inner London for two years before becoming clerk to the justices in Ashford, Kent.
  • After being called to the bar, he practiced in and around London and became deputy clerk to the justices in inner London for two years before becoming clerk to the justices in Ashford, Kent.
  • :' information is laid for the purposes of section 127 of the Magistrates'Courts Act 1980 when it is received at the office of the clerk to the justices for the relevant area '.
  • She was a law clerk to the Justice J . O . Sentell of the Alabama Supreme Court in 1977, and to U . S . District Court Robert Varner, of the Middle District of Alabama, from 1977 to 78.
  • Meanwhile, justices of the peace were being advised in their petty sessions work by the justices'clerk ( or clerk to the justices ), an office which still exists in England and Wales today as the principal legal adviser in magistrates'courts.
  • A justice of the peace may sit at any magistrate's court in England and Wales, but in practice, they are appointed to their local bench ( a colloquial and legal term for the local court ) and are provided with advice ( especially on sentencing ) by a legally qualified Clerk to the Justices.
  • The question therefore is not whether in this case the deputy clerk made any observation or offered any criticism which he might not properly have made or offered; the question is whether he was so related to the case in its civil aspect as to be unfit to act as clerk to the justices in the criminal matter.
  • It was the Unlawful Societies Act of 1799 that saw the first statute " for the more effectual suppression of societies established for seditious and treasonable purposes "; once enacted it affected all societies whose members were required to take an oath not authorised by law, shall be deemed " unlawful combinations . " It was as a result of the intervention of the Grand Master of the Antients, The 4th Duke of Atholl, and the Acting Grand Master of the Moderns, the earl of Moira that a special exempting clause was inserted into this legislation in favour of societies " held under the Denomination of Lodges of Freemasons " provided that they had been " usually held before the Act " and their names, places and times of meeting and the names of the members were annually registered with the local Clerk to the Justices of the Peace.