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Protest

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Protest
Refers to the formal declaration in writing or vocal, expressing the strong objection or disapproval on certain acts, issues or thing.

 


Protest: A communication by a member of the public to a patent office arguing and providing evidence that the granting of a patent would be improper.

Protest: 1. Dissent; disapproval; a written statement, by someone making a payment, that he thinks the payment is illegal, exorbitant, unwarranted, etc. , thus reserving the right to get the money back. 2. An objection to a legal rule or judgment.

protest
1) v. to complain in some public way about any act already done or about to be done, such as adoption of a regulation by a governemt, sending troops overseas, or use of the death penalty. 2) v.

Other Protestants
Several key leaders early in the Protestant Reformation, including Martin Luther and John Calvin, followed the traditional reasoning in favour of capital punishment, ...

Protests against the lettres de cachet were made continually by the parlement of Paris and by the provincial parlements, and often also by the States-General.

Expanded Legal Definition of UnconscionableUnder Protest A qualification made to a legal action taken by a person that the action is contrary to the intent or desire of the person making the protest.

ACCEPTOR SUPRA PROTEST, in contracts, is a third person, who, after protest for non-acceptance by the drawee, accepts the bill for the honor of the drawer, or of the particular endorser.

OBJECTION - A protest or exception made by a party against an action by the opposing party.

God does not change no matter what we insist, how loudly we protest, nor how many laws we pass. Hold an apple in your outstretched hand and open your fingers. The apple will fall.

To consent or agree without action or protest. Inaction can bind a person legally just as direct action can. Implied recognition of the terms of a contract can be as binding as direct acceptance of that contract.

by his adversary, and to make it part of his case, he ought to admit such matter in his own pleadings; as if either party states the title under which his adversary claims, in which instances it is directly opposite in its nature to a protestation.

Their home state may point out or protest injustice and may also threaten reprisals; such situations have frequently caused international disputes.

Nullification was evident during the Vietnam war (when selective service protesters were acquitted by juries opposed to the war) and currently appears in criminal cases when the jury disagrees with the punishment-for example, ...

Blue Flu An organized protest by law enforcement officers who call in sick. Police officers may stage these "sick-outs" because they are not legally allowed to go on strike.
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objection
n. a lawyer's protest about the legal propriety of a question whi...
obligation
n. a legal duty to pay or do something.

Class Action On Behalf of Anti-War Protestors
F-1 Visa - Students in Academic & Language Program
Estate Planning in the District of Columbia ...

A situation in which the owner of a trademark or service mark does not use the mark for an extended period of time, fails to protest the unauthorized use of the mark by others or lets others use the mark without adequate supervision.

Address. 2. The name and residence of the drawee in a bill of exchange. See Protest, 2.
Ad pios usus. For religious purposes.
Adult. Latin adultus, grown up. A person twenty-one or more years of age.

In the context of intellectual property, abandoned property refers to the relinquishing of intellectual property rights by an owner, thereby allowing others to use the intellectual property without protest.

In 1989 Premier Li Peng unilaterally invoked the martial law clause to allow the military to stage a crackdown on Tiananmen Square protesters.

objection: A formal protest made by a party over testimony or evidence that the other side tries to introduce.

"Wrongly captured" refers to the removal of a person from one jurisdiction to another jurisdiction, such as from one country to another country, without bilateral consent. Absent a protest or demand from the originating country to return the person, ...

The Estates and Protested Individuals Code will take effect on April 1, 2000, and will replace the Michigan Revised Probate Code.

See also: State, Person, Law, Information, Action

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