writ of prohibition การใช้
- They had issued writs of prohibition against the Federal Court.
- The petition for a writ of prohibition is denied.
- Most often, these courts issue writs of prohibition to prevent lower courts from exceeding their jurisdiction.
- Victorious, Coke freely left, and continued to issue writs of prohibition against the High Commission.
- The unusual filing involves a type of appeal known as a writ of mandamus or writ of prohibition.
- Writs of Prohibition were frequently issued by Common Law courts to bar filing the case in a Church court.
- The use of the writ of prohibition also varied with the relationship between the Chancery and the common law judges.
- The writ of prohibition is used to prevent the commission of a specified act or issuance of a particular order.
- The writ of prohibition may not be used to undo any previous acts, but only to prohibit acts not completed.
- After the conclusion of this dispute, Coke freely left, and continued to issue writs of prohibition against the High Commission.
- Writs of prohibition are similar to writs of certiorari, as both types of writs allow superior courts to manage inferior courts.
- As writs of prohibition were rather easy to obtain, in the late thirteenth century, writs of Consultation came into use.
- However, unlike a writ of prohibition, superior courts issue writs of certiorari to review decisions which inferior courts have already made.
- One of the claimants, Joins, then filed for a " writ of prohibition " to stop the Citizenship Court from hearing any cases.
- If the Chancellor agreed, he could issue a writ of Consultation, reversing the writ of prohibition and allowing the case to continue in the ecclesiastical court.
- A writ of prohibition and writ of mandamus, Roberts concluded, were appropriate remedies if the NLRB decided to withdraw its decision before it had filed the transcript.
- As the common law courts became more formalized and rigid in their procedure and jurisprudence, they also ceased using the writ of prohibition as a remedy against individual defendants.
- The rise in the use of writs of prohibition accompanied the consolidation of power in the English monarchy and the growth of the court system in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.
- Also, unlike injunctions and the writ of prohibition, the writ of estrepement merely stopped further damage, and could not command the repair or replacement of property already damaged.
- The other use means'on the application of'when used in the case name where prerogative relief is sought, such as a writ of prohibition, certiorari or mandamus.
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