So judges and magistrates are not subject to litigation from disgruntled litigants. |
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Submissive magistrates were dismissed and William took the decision to cut the dykes and deliberately flood the area surrounding Leyden. |
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A violent street brawl broke out in Bury town centre when two feuding groups were ejected from a nightclub, magistrates heard. |
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It was an unwritten rule in Lancashire that no active manufacturers could become magistrates. |
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The clerk retired with the magistrates when they considered their verdict and the magistrates proceeded to find McCarthy guilty. |
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The case will eventually be dealt with in the Crown Court, as the charges are too serious for magistrates to preside over. |
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They were convicted by the magistrates of obstructing a police officer in the execution of his duty. |
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The magistrates agreed to the defence counsel's application for the defendants' costs to be taxed and paid out of central funds. |
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The magistrates decided the offence so serious that the only option was a custodial sentence. |
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At earlier hearings magistrates have had to order him to stay in the cells because of his outbursts in court. |
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All the people who were arrested appeared before a special court set up by magistrates. |
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In sentencing the magistrates said the offences were so serious that custody was the only option. |
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The Committee on District Courts establishes the number of magistrates in each district. |
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The government also plans a new youth court with a judge and two magistrates. |
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Not all the versions they hear may be the same so the magistrates have to decide which one is the true story. |
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The latter were called curule aediles and they were considered curule magistrates. |
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Consumer watchdogs found fromage frais and other milk products for sale after their sell-by date in a York area village store, magistrates heard. |
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Some judges and magistrates tend to clothe their remarks in florid language which is likely to appeal to reporters. |
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If they do not pay, the Council is expected to prosecute them for illegally plying for hire under the Road Traffic Act in a magistrates court. |
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A drunken man assaulted two special constables when they intervened in a row in the town centre, Swindon magistrates heard. |
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The constitution gives the powers of hiring or firing magistrates to the Judicial Service Commission, which Gicheru chairs. |
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Four Italian football fans were fined by magistrates after a violent disturbance at Stansted Airport. |
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The case appeared before Beverley magistrates, after officers spent months compiling evidence and safety reports. |
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She also appeared before magistrates for brandishing a pickaxe during an argument with her boyfriend. |
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If dealt with in the magistrates court, minor indictable matters are prosecuted by the police. |
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For example, the magistrates could only exercise their power of committal to prison on a finding of wilful refusal to pay or of culpable neglect. |
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Earlier this week, the magistrates committed Murdoch to stand trial saying he had a case to answer on all three charges. |
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The magistrates committed her to Preston Crown Court for sentence after ruling their powers of punishment were insufficient. |
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He admitted the offences in November when he appeared before magistrates in Selby, who committed him to York Crown Court yesterday for sentence. |
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On each occasion, magistrates had warned him that he could be resentenced for his crimes if he committed another offence within a year. |
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Often glancing at the magistrates, Dumas was a commanding presence with a flair for the dramatic. |
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There was uproar in court when the magistrates agreed to adjourn the case to a date yet to be fixed. |
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If the attempt to block the licence is unsuccessful, the petitioners are asking magistrates to limit the business's opening hours to 11 pm. |
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The parson told the magistrates that he knew nothing of his niece's whereabouts until he saw the notice in the newspapers. |
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The magistrates, who can grant financial help in extreme circumstances, turned down his request. |
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Mr Murray told magistrates that Porter was suffering from an untreatable paranoid personality disorder. |
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Bradford magistrates heard how the officers also came across dirt on shelves, on the kitchen floor, and on a chopping board. |
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The thugs will then be issued with a civil summons to attend magistrates court where police will apply to the bench for banning orders. |
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A motorist whose lies led to her mother being summoned to appear before magistrates has been banned from driving for four months. |
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A York gardener was caught red-handed with a hoard of stolen statues, gnomes and ornaments, magistrates heard. |
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Bow Street magistrates court opened for business in about 1740, often for trials connected to the over-consumption of gin in Covent Garden. |
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The seats of the magistrates were all behind us and were styled in pew fashion. |
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A motorist was so furious after his van was clamped that he sawed the clamp off and drove away, York magistrates heard. |
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A Warminster man admitted his drunken behaviour had been out of order when he appeared before magistrates. |
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Hartlepool magistrates yesterday ordered the forfeiture and destruction of the cannabis plants. |
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The new facility became operational last July and incorporates crown, magistrates and county courts. |
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The terms of the order were not explained to the defendant by the magistrates in open court. |
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I have answered the questions posed by the magistrates in the case stated in the final paragraph of the judgment. |
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The wider the debates the more they are likely to harass, confuse and distract hard-pressed District Court judges and magistrates in particular. |
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In Rome, military law derived from the imperium of magistrates in their capacity as commanders of the Roman military forces. |
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The magistrates, as requested, have stated a case for the purposes of this appeal. |
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It housed the Town Hall, magistrates and stannary courts, police offices and cells and the fire brigade. |
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The goede vrouws were summoned before the magistrates and fined for their discourteous conduct. |
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As for the magistrates, they have demonstrated either an amazing lack of imagination and intelligence or, more worryingly, vindictiveness. |
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It concerned the bugging of former National Security Service chief's conversations with politicians, magistrates and journalists. |
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A woman picked up by police for being drunk three times in the space of a few days had a tragic past, Swindon magistrates were told. |
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The new powers given to magistrates to deduct fines from wages and benefits are a useful tool. |
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If you step over the line and steal you may well find yourself arrested and up before the magistrates. |
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A drunkard twice found lying on the ground walked from court unpunished, after magistrates said they had little choice. |
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The magistrates described the deductions as shocking, uncalled for and unfair since they were never consulted or notified. |
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The judge, sitting with two magistrates, had been told the Crown did not oppose the appeal. |
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And they spend at least ten days sitting with mentor magistrates on a broad variety of cases. |
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Judge Linda Sutcliffe, sitting with two magistrates, agreed to overturn the ban. |
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Peter Butterfield, mitigating, asked for magistrates to consider the defendant's previously unblemished record. |
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He loitered in the corridor outside, a tyre-kicker awaiting his turn in front of the magistrates. |
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A barrister launched a blistering attack on an anti-social behaviour order imposed by magistrates on Thursday. |
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If the defendant signifies an intention to plead not guilty, proceedings to determine the mode of trial are held before magistrates. |
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The magistrates heard that the company manufactured tufted and Axminster carpets and handled 365 tonnes of packaging waste last year. |
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But magistrates heard he was now willing to accept what had happened as he trusts the victim and believes what she says is true. |
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Such a combination suggested that misunderstandings and conflicts with the magistrates would be a thing of the past. |
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He was hauled before Manchester magistrates who read our story in open court. |
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Eleven people were hauled before magistrates earlier this week charged with public nuisance offences. |
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A young shopworker's fear that she could not provide for her unborn baby drove her to crime, York magistrates heard. |
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Their effect is the early transfer of jurisdiction for management of such cases from magistrates to the Crown Court. |
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The call comes as new licensing laws transferring responsibility for issuing licences from magistrates to the council came into force this week. |
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Victims live in fear while repeat violators enjoy the benefits of parole under the beneficence of liberal magistrates. |
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Mock court sessions designed to encourage potential magistrates to join the bench will be held in Bradford next month. |
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In England and Wales borough and country police forces were set up under the control of local magistrates in 1835 and 1839 respectively. |
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Repeat young offenders have had to wait up to four months to be tried before magistrates. |
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The teenager pleaded guilty and magistrates ordered him to perform 60 hours of unpaid work within 12 months. |
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His case was listed at Bow Street magistrates court today but he was not expected to attend. |
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The man and woman accused of his murder were due to appear before Bradford magistrates today. |
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The case was heard at Andover, which has custody facilities, in case the magistrates decided to send Little to prison. |
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He had then made the time-worn accusation that the pretensions of the courts reduced the kingdom to an aristocracy of magistrates. |
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But the case was abandoned Thursday after magistrates found he had not committed a criminal offense. |
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However, Gazette editor Gary Lawrence asked the magistrates to exercise their power to waive the rule. |
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The 13-year-olds were found guilty of breaching an order, but walked free from court after magistrates imposed a two-year supervision order. |
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As far as we are concerned, we will throw the book at them and we would expect that magistrates do the same. |
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But the superintendent of police said the prisoner was the sort to wander off, and so magistrates refused his request and sent him back to jail. |
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This had the effect of excluding Quakers from certain public offices, most significantly those of magistrates and judges. |
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In 1992 he was prosecuted by the council in the magistrates court after hurling abuse at a member of the public. |
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There can be no doubt that the magistrates were entitled to reject the argument of self-defence or defence of another. |
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She was charged with drink-driving and pleaded guilty before magistrates, and was sentenced to a month in jail. |
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Both the cases involved much more extreme language and severe criticism of the behaviour and performance of the respective magistrates. |
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As well as jailing him for eight weeks magistrates imposed another driving ban, which runs out at the same time as his current disqualification. |
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A series of expedients was introduced, creating twenty-one paid magistrates controlling seven police offices. |
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But how did they know he was sincere about changing his behaviour, and wasn't just putting on an act to impress magistrates? |
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Scarborough magistrates heard yesterday that John dived from a diving board around 3pm. |
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Blackburn magistrates heard that Howard Wayne Eastham grabbed his aunt by the throat during the incident and she fell to the floor. |
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An unemployed father grabbed his girlfriend by the throat and threatened to kill her in a drunken argument, Selby magistrates heard. |
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This is not to say, of course, that there are no examples of racially prejudiced judges, magistrates or probation officers. |
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Blackburn magistrates heard the officer had tried to take evasive action, which resulted in the car swerving across the road. |
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The magistrates declined jurisdiction of the case and committed the defendant for trial at the Crown Court. |
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Licensing justices at Andover magistrates court will consider the application next Wednesday. |
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Months of suffering at children's hands drove a young householder to fire an air rifle into a street of youngsters, York magistrates heard. |
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The 35-year-old cabbie from Wakefield walked grinning from the city's magistrates court after receiving the fine and a six-month driving ban. |
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But when his love was not reciprocated he turned from admirer to stalker, Harrogate magistrates were told. |
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The magistrates heard that he had failed to provide a specimen and had driven without due care and attention at Canvey Island. |
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In the following section of the case stated the magistrates summarise the testimony of the witnesses who gave evidence. |
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As well as the three-year driving ban and six-month curfew, the magistrates also ordered her to sit another test before getting her licence back. |
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He kept scrap cars and other waste on land near York for years, against regulations, York magistrates heard. |
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Legal arguments are being prepared for what could become a test case in front of magistrates this month. |
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Swindon magistrates heard they had waged a campaign of terror in the past six months, causing mayhem for shoppers and staff. |
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More and more governments are having to step in and override these magistrates who arrogantly refuse to take note of public disquiet. |
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Mr Chirac has flatly rejected requests to accept a summons for questioning by magistrates in the travel scandal. |
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He was rushing to make an important meeting in York after being led by the computer to its Lancastrian village namesake, Selby magistrates heard. |
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Swindon magistrates remanded him in custody and committed the case to crown court. |
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Both accused were then remanded in custody pending an appeal hearing against the decision of the magistrates. |
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Sir, my research indicates that there is no code of dress prescribed or agreed upon for attorneys appearing in the magistrates court. |
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A 20-year-old Lancaster man has been bailed to appear before magistrates in January in connection with a burglary at the park last month. |
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Magistrates bailed the couple to appear before magistrates for committal proceedings on Monday, March 14 this year. |
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But magistrates also heard no licence was applied for by Barratts to protect the badgers under the 1992 Badgers Act. |
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I think new magistrates should have been secured long before the dismissal. |
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I'm not surprised that this society is becoming increasingly lawless when magistrates are giving out such small fines. |
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The magistrates decided against sending the boy to crown court for a harsher sentence. |
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As fiscal pressures increased, certain magistrates in the 1760s began to call for lost estates to be restored. |
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There is much admiring of young legal eagles, studying of wizened magistrates and cowering from unrepentant defendants to be done. |
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The punishment must fit the crime, yet we let magistrates get away with handing out lenient sentences. |
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Local residents should serve on juries in the upper courts and as lay magistrates in the lower courts. |
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The court heard he had been dealt with by Haverfordwest magistrates by way of a fine. |
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We've heard of your liberality with magistrates and the like, so we thought to come and see for ourselves. |
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The Fourth Amendment does not contemplate the executive officers of Government as neutral and disinterested magistrates. |
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None of the three defendants appeared in court, but magistrates found all three cases proved. |
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They appeared in magistrates court in Preston yesterday alongside five others. |
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It is clear that the magistrates heard a great deal of factual evidence and had regard to that. |
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But Samantha Leigh, prosecuting, said trouble started in 1998 when Henson received a bind over from magistrates for a common assault on Mrs Williams. |
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Anti-drink drive campaigners today blasted magistrates for not jailing a mum who drove off with her young son after knocking back a bottle of wine. |
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In November, English recruiting officers appeared in Boston, and the Assembly and the Boston magistrates forbade any recruiting or any quartering of troops in the town. |
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These cases attract great attention, and acid comments from magistrates. |
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Jonathan Cripwell, prosecuting for City of York Council, told magistrates that, in fact, Bi and Ali had a joint tenancy and they were living together. |
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The Law Commission's work on this topic has taken over 20 years and has massive support amongst judges, magistrates, the police and solicitors and barristers. |
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Howard Ogden, defending, said that Adamson claimed to have sent a letter setting out detailed reasons for his no-show by recorded delivery to the magistrates. |
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Lay magistrates are not paid for carrying out their duties, but may claim allowances, within specified limits, for travelling, subsistence and financial loss. |
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A devoted father is to be sentenced by magistrates next month. |
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Alternatively riotous crowds would try to intimidate local magistrates into fixing acceptable prices, which was seen anyway as nothing less than their duty. |
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The Duke of Edinburgh was in Rochdale on Friday 19 November 1976 to give the royal seal of approval to the town's new shopping centre and magistrates court. |
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Indeed, since bribery is considered essential for lubricating a deal, corruption-busting magistrates can find themselves accused of harming French business interests. |
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Miss Stark, 56, has been summonsed to appear before Hammersmith magistrates on Friday. |
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Legislation permitted magistrates to enforce employment agreements with penal sanctions in the form of imprisonment, fines, and physical punishment. |
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Fine schedules are currently with the chief magistrates for the 10 magisterial districts of Johannesburg, who have to formally approve the structures. |
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He was bailed to appear before Cheltenham magistrates on Wednesday. |
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A spokesman said 16 of them would appear before magistrates in Grimsby and Cleethorpes today while another two were bailed to appear before magistrates tomorrow. |
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The bag contained a teddy bear, some fruit and some clothes but magistrates had no sympathy and banged him up for 10 days under public nuisance laws. |
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Toop did not have a particularly helpful start to his life and had some difficulty in dealing with confrontational situations, Mr Warren told magistrates. |
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She was appealing against the sentence after magistrates ordered her to serve one day in prison for the theft and then complete the rest of her sentence for robbery. |
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The radical move forms part of a shake-up in licensing laws which will see the power to grant liquor licences transferred from magistrates to local authorities. |
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If magistrates give the go-ahead, the new bars will join an array of trendy nightspots which have opened up in the town centre during recent months. |
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When she appeared before magistrates five days later she was given an interim ban, but was caught drink driving again when police did a spot check on her car. |
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After being charged with the thefts and obstruction, police released him on bail to appear before magistrates the following week but he failed to turn up. |
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In what became Inner London, stipendiaries did all the work in their own court-houses, lay magistrates sitting in separate courthouses dealing only with trivial matters. |
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After a summons has been issued magistrates can empower the council to take the money it is owed straight out of people's wage packets or deduct it from their income support. |
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The magistrates passed sentence after reading pre-sentence reports. |
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The courts employ 60 clerks who act as legal advisers to magistrates. |
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He had begun his involvement with the village court as a peace officer, delivering summonses and acting as an executive servant of the magistrates. |
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Therefore, it all dates back to the illegality of the magistrates. |
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Although most committers of incest were sentenced to banishment for life, it is not surprising that magistrates were not entirely consistent in imposing punishments. |
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The police had objected to the granting of a provisional licence by magistrates on the grounds the premises are unsuitable for the sale of intoxicating liquor. |
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Yet despite this humiliation the senior magistrates remained in place, prime among them the first president, d' Aligre, by now Calonne's irreconcilable enemy. |
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It also means that those not paying their fines will be dealt with in civil proceedings at the county court, rather than criminal proceedings in the magistrates court. |
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Under regulations, adopted by Parliament, lawyers, prosecutors and magistrates are to declare incomes and property with the National Audit Office. |
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Apart from the crowds which gathered outside the magistrates court to catch a glimpse of the self-confessed killer, thousands more went to the disused and flooded quarry. |
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The only adults allowed to wear this toga were curule magistrates. |
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The Chairman of the magistrates gaveled loudly on the block. |
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The socialite and sometime model appeared before a judge at Bow Street magistrates court for obstructing the highway during last week's pro-hunting demos in London. |
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Earlier this month, he was given the perfect opportunity to air his grievances in public when he appeared before magistrates in Guildford, charged with the same offence. |
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Volubilis, which seems to have aided the Roman side, was elevated to the rank of municipium, governed no longer by suffetes but by duumvirs, or annual magistrates. |
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His descendants did not live in the Capitania of Angra, instead sending ouvidores, magistrates to the territory to administer the possessions. |
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Family proceedings may be held before specially trained magistrates in family proceedings courts within magistrates' courts. |
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These cases are heard by specially trained magistrates sitting in a youth court. |
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A POLICE chief hit out at magistrates for again freeing a serial thief known as Billy the Pigeon because he always flies the coop. |
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Both verdict and sentence are solely in the hands of judges and magistrates. |
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In Glasgow, the volume of business required the employment of four solicitors as stipendiary magistrates who sit in place of the lay justices. |
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Justices are lay magistrates who as advised by a legally qualified clerk, known as the legal adviser. |
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Under the provost were magistrates or baillies who both acted as councillors, and in the enforcement of laws. |
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The adaptation of law to new needs was given over to juridical practice, to magistrates, and especially to the praetors. |
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In reality, magistrates rarely impose the maximum fines allowed to them by law. |
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The historical Roman duumvirs were not rulers but magistrates, performing various judicial, religious, or public functions. |
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Terentilius Arsa, proposed that the law should be written, in order to prevent magistrates from applying the law arbitrarily. |
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Aggiornamento with the increasingly truculent magistrates was a major plank of Choiseul's recovery strategy for the state. |
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A new bell was purchased by the magistrates in 1641 and that bell is still on display in the People's Palace Museum, near Glasgow Green. |
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Garside was discharged as the magistrates found darts, indeed, to be a game of skill. |
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In December Samuel Whitbread MP introduced a bill giving magistrates the power to fix minimum wages and Fox said he would vote for it. |
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Special curatores for a term seem to have been appointed on occasion, even after the institution of the permanent magistrates bearing that title. |
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The repairing authorities, in this case, were the magistri pagorum or magistrates of the cantons. |
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In 1650, Fox was brought before the magistrates Gervase Bennet and Nathaniel Barton, on a charge of religious blasphemy. |
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From 1739 onward, Wesley and the Methodists were persecuted by clergy and magistrates for various reasons. |
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This created problems for some consuls and praetors, and these magistrates would occasionally have their imperium extended. |
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To prevent any citizen from gaining too much power, new magistrates were elected annually and had to share power with a colleague. |
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Other magistrates of the Republic include tribunes, quaestors, aediles, praetors and censors. |
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The most important magistrates were the two consuls, who together exercised executive authority such as imperium, or military command. |
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This allowed exemption on production of a certificate of conscientious objection signed by two magistrates. |
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Appointments to the county bench of magistrates were usually made on the recommendation of the lieutenant. |
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In both Sheffield and Bradford spies had kept magistrates aware of the conspirators' plans, and these attempted risings were easily quashed. |
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Detective Constable Brian Stevens, 42, of March, Cambs, and Louise Austin, 32, of Chatteris, Cambs, were appearing before Bedford magistrates. |
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Police said the youth will appear before magistrates in Bury St Edmunds, and will remain in custody until then. |
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A case against a mother who was taken to court after dropping a piece of sausage roll on the pavement was dismissed by magistrates yesterday. |
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But they smelled a rat after he left the city's magistrates were But they smelled a rat after he left the city's magistrates were told. |
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Organisers applied for permission to run a beer tent but were yesterday turned down by Birkenhead magistrates for the second year in succession. |
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Kirklees magistrates heard that the property was a former pub converted into nine bedsits. |
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This transformed the magistrates from representatives of the people to representatives of the dictator. |
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Damian Lye, 20, and L Danny Roddy, 25, both of Glastonbury Drive in Longwood, were before Kirklees magistrates. |
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British judges and magistrates would also be sent to India to administer the legal system. |
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Intimidation was widely practised by Ribbonmen and their like, and many magistrates preferred the quiet life. |
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Manning was fined pounds 250 by North Devon magistrates after admitting the offence in Barnstaple. |
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Yesterday, he appeared before magistrates in Llandudno accused of breaching his restraining order. |
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Jeremy Mark Randon, 40, of Heather Drive Stourbridge, gave no indication of pleas at Dolgellau magistrates court. |
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Kirklees magistrates heard that the pet attacking the Jack Russell turned the dog onto its back and grabbed it by the throat. |
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Ambeer Khan, of Alder Street, Hillhouse, was before Kirklees magistrates yesterday. |
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Roman government was headed by two consuls, elected annually by the citizens and advised by a senate composed of appointed magistrates. |
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The magistrates were based at Rougemont Castle, Exeter, and were not elected by the people. |
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Before 1888, the small towns and rural areas in Devon were governed by magistrates through the Devon Court of Quarter Sessions. |
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A SCHEME that gives bouncers police powers to slap on-the-spot fines on rowdy nightclubbers has been angrily attacked by cops and magistrates. |
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Further, early sentences by magistrates against the rioters, even those who destroyed threshing machines, were fairly light. |
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Often they sought to enlist local parish officials and occasionally magistrates to raise levels of poor relief as well. |
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The Luddites and their supporters anonymously sent death threats to, and possibly attacked, magistrates and food merchants. |
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Take oaths from all kings and magistrates at their installment, to do impartial justice by law. Milton. |
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Their function in Victoria particularly relates to alleged offences either by bodies corporate or where magistrates have aborted the prosecution. |
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Margaret Raynsford, a partner in The Offie in Fielding Court, Biddick Hall, South Shields, appeared before South Tyneside magistrates last week. |
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Ordinarily, bills of indictment were preferred after there had been an examination before the magistrates. |
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These reports included the decisions of the High Court only and were collated, compiled and edited by different puisne judges and magistrates. |
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Baty, 58, of Fairney Edge, Ponteland, was caught out by a routine cross-check, magistrates at Bedlington Law Courts were told. |
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The term is derived from the tribunes, magistrates of the Classical Roman Republic. |
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In the lower courts, magistrates are addressed as Your worship, and district court judges as Your Honour. |
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Victoria Vergette, of Burnside Drive in Holmfirth, appeared before Kirklees magistrates yesterday. |
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In extreme cases the magistrates have to expel or execute dangerous heretics. |
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The judicial system includes local magistrates grouped under the Magistrates' Court, which hears less serious cases. |
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The magistrates were mobbed by vivat-yelling crowds, some 10,000 of whom made their way to the Bastille where they clamoured for Rohan's release. |
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During the last periods, numerous Italians have been recognised as the prominent prosecutor magistrates. |
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Benjamin Denton, of Top of the Moor in StocKsmoor, was before KirKlees magistrates yesterday. |
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A BIRMINGHAM man who admitted fitting a set of dentures to a blind woman despite being unqualified has been fined by magistrates. |
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Kirklees magistrates were told that on January 18 Zaman was taken to Huddersfield Royal Infirmary. |
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The unified list states the magistrates for each AUC from the first year of the first king to the death of Augustus. |
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Andrew White, 45, was apparently hallucinating after drinking and taking drugs, magistrates in the town heard yesterday. |
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Drink-driver Stephen Townend was banned for 16 months when he appeared before magistrates. |
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Much of the court's administrative business was delegated to committees of magistrates, who had specific responsibilities. |
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This, in effect, transformed the magistrates from being representatives of the people to being representatives of the dictator. |
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In the 1980s, the Mafia was deeply weakened by a second important campaign led by magistrates Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino. |
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They advised the magistrates who were entrusted with the administration of justice, most importantly the praetors. |
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It was situated in the old town hall in Fenton but closed in 2012, all magistrates proceedings now take place in Newcastle. |
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The Royal Burghs Act provided for the election of magistrates and councillors. |
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Local magistrates were appointed to deal with petty sessions while Lords Lieutenant were appointed as the King's representative. |
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The North Wales Police Authority consisted of 17 members, of whom 9 were councillors, 3 were magistrates and 5 were independent members. |
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To this end, the Practice Direction 2000 attempts to resolve issues concerning the influence of clerks over magistrates. |
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On Friday he pleaded not guilty to two offences of racially aggravated assault and one of causing racially aggravated harassment when he appeared before Norwich magistrates. |
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This power of punishment even extended to inferior magistrates. |
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According to a 2013 TV Licensing briefing document, the level of fines and costs imposed by magistrates court vary considerably between different regions of England and Wales. |
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They were normally where the magistrates held court, and used for other official ceremonies, having many of the functions of the modern town hall. |
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The Roman emperors were republican magistrates named by the senate. |
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Caesar then increased the number of magistrates who were elected each year, which created a large pool of experienced magistrates, and allowed Caesar to reward his supporters. |
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The building also houses the magistrates courts and other offices. |
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His bodyguards had their ceremonial axes broken, two high magistrates accompanying him were wounded, and he had a bucket of excrement thrown over him. |
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Lyam Phillips, 24, admitted fraud by making a false representation before magistrates, who committed him to Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court for sentence. |
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It is popular with magistrates and often used for summary offences. |
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Onkar Singh Chokker, aged 51, of Mawnan Close, and 55-year-old Balkar Singh Chima, of The Copse, were remanded in custody by Nuneaton magistrates yesterday afternoon. |
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Early Acts had given magistrates powers to punish anyone damaging turnpike property, such as defacing milestones, breaking turnpike gates or avoiding tolls. |
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The 1832 Reform Act created two members of parliament, the 1835 Municipal Reform Act allowed the election of magistrates, borough councillors and aldermen. |
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The fact that a PSR has been ordered means that the magistrates are taking your case seriously and must be considering a community penalty at least. |
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Cy Chadwick, 44, who played bad boy Nick Bates for more than a decade, confirmed his date of birth and address before entering a not guilty plea at Leeds magistrates court. |
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Many of them also sat as magistrates judging the less serious cases. |
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In 2004 Polly Wiessner had initiated a new research project on tribal fighting with modern weapons together with Nitze Pupu and Akii Tumu and Village Court magistrates. |
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By the late 1600s the situation improved as surveyors were appointed by the magistrates, who were allowed to levy a rate to pay for some of the work. |
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But there was the greatest degree of harshness and injustice in the manner in which the conduct of the magistrates upon that occasion was animadverted upon by that House. |
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Verulamium, the Roman settlement near Verlamion, gained the status of municipium ca 50, allowing its leading magistrates to become Roman citizens. |
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They say the club has now been soundproofed since Coventry magistrates fined them pounds 1,000 and ordered them to pay pounds 593 costs last Wednesday. |
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From 375 BC to 371 BC, the republic experienced a constitutional crisis during which the tribunes used their vetoes to prevent the election of senior magistrates. |
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The confession denies that the Pope has any jurisdiction over civil magistrates or authority to deprive magistrates of their office if he determines them to be heretics. |
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Christopher Moyle, 51, admitted a clutch of offences before magistrates at Pontypridd who committed him to Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court for sentence. |
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By 1547, opposition to Calvin and other French refugee ministers had grown to constitute the majority of the syndics, the civil magistrates of Geneva. |
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Since both magistrates and decurions were members of wealthy families, Rome rule had reinforced the development of local hereditary aristocracies. |
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The City magistrates were of the generation that had fought in the Civil War, and could remember how Charles I's grab for absolute power had led to that national trauma. |
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Boys, up until the festival of Liberalia, wore the toga praetexta, which was a toga with a crimson or purple border, also worn by magistrates in office. |
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The Annales Maximi contained such information as names of the magistrates of each year, public events, and omens such as eclipses and monstrous births. |
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For all cases, including indictable ones, the magistrates will have to decide, however, if the defendant is to be released on bail or remanded into custody. |
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In the 130s voting by ballot had been introduced in elections for choosing magistrates, passing laws and deciding legal cases, replacing the earlier system of oral voting. |
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The magistrates also fined Paul Routledge, of South Parade, Thornley, pounds 175 with pounds 130 costs for dropping a Macdonald's paper cup and bag at Dalton Park, Murton. |
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In practice, however, they were usually followed by the magistrates. |
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In this assembly, magistrates were elected and laws were passed. |
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Birmingham magistrates heard how Beard qualified as a denturist in Canada in 1997 and is allowed to make dentures, but not to fit them into patients' mouths. |
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Darren Andrew Ashurst was remanded in custody by magistrates in Wigan, charged with killing Louise Edith Sellars, who lived in the Appley Bridge area of Wigan. |
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Marcian Kasprzak was before Huddersfield magistrates yesterday. |
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The councillors selected a number of their members to be bailies, who acted as a magistrates bench for the burgh and dealt with such issues as licensing. |
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Each of the county hundreds was likewise the responsibility of a Deputy Lieutenant, who relayed orders to the justices of the peace or magistrates. |
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Thousands of magistrates court staff in England and Wales have started a work to rule which union leaders warned could lead to sittings being cancelled. |
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He went to the cutcherry and enrolled himself as a muktear and soon the litigants and the magistrates found out how clever he was and he acquired a big practice. |
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On the Isle of Man, prosecutions are prepared by Capita on behalf of the BBC although they are carried out by Manx Law Officials in magistrates courts. |
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