เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

reasonable care and skill การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The Court of Appeal upheld a judge's decision eight months ago that match referee Michael Nolan had failed to exercise reasonable care and skill in preventing a scrum from collapsing.
  • It was an implied term that they should do the work with reasonable care and skill, so as to make the banks reasonably fit for the purpose of preventing flooding.
  • If a trust document is silent, trustees must avoid any possibility of a conflict of interest, manage the trust's affairs with reasonable care and skill, and only act for purposes consistent with the trust's terms.
  • While the opponent alleged to have caused Ben Smoldon's injury was cleared of blame, High Court judge Sir Richard Curtis said that match referee Michael Nolan had failed to exercise reasonable care and skill in preventing repeated scrum collapses.
  • He may legally end a pregnancy, the law says, if the procedure is aimed at " the preservation of the mother's life " and if it is performed " in good faith and with reasonable care and skill ."
  • It seems to me that if such a person makes a forecast, intending that the other should act upon it-and he does act upon it, it can well be interpreted as a warranty that the forecast is sound and reliable in the sense that they made it with reasonable care and skill.
  • I consider that Hamilton owed P . B . S . a duty, both in law and in equity, to exercise reasonable care and skill, and P . B . S . was able to mount a claim against him for breach of the legal duty, and, in the alternative, breach of the equitable duty.
  • "A person is not criminally responsible for performing . . . with reasonable care and skill, a surgical operation . . . for the patient's benefit . . . if performing the operation . . . is reasonable, having regard to the patient's state at the time and to all the circumstances of the case"
  • "In important respects, relating to the scrum, he failed to exercise reasonable care and skill in the prevention of collapses by sufficient instruction to the front rows and in the use of the ` crouch, touch, pause and engage'( scrummaging ) rule thereby reducing the impact of the engagement to an acceptable level, " the judge said.
  • Section 217 of the Code provides that a person is not criminally responsible for performing in good faith and with reasonable care and skill a surgical operation upon an unborn child for the preservation of the mother s life if the performance of the operation is reasonable, having regard to the patient s state at the time and to all the circumstances of the case.