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Strike

Law Strict liabilitySua sponte

Strike
(v) A strike is defined as the willful abstaining from their allotted work by the workers of an organization as a protest measure to pressurize the management thereby bargaining their demands (n) strike is used to represent the order of a ...

 


Strike - Highlighting in the record of a case, evidence that has been improperly offered and will not be relied upon.
Subject research - Research of matter by determining all law related to that matter by finding everything on the subject.

Strike: 1. To strike a word or passage, means to delete it. 2. A work stoppage by employees for the purpose of obtaining better wages, working conditions, or fringe benefits from an employer.

strike
1) v. to remove a statement from the record of the court proceedings by order of the judge due to impropriety of a question, answer or comment to which there has been an objection.

Strike - Highlighting evidence, in the record of case, that has been improperly offered and will not be relied upon.
Sua Sponte - A Latin phrase which means on one's own behalf, voluntary, without prompting or suggestion.

strike: To delete or remove, as in to strike (a case) from the court's calendar.
sua sponte: Commonly used to describe when a judge does something without being asked to by either party in a case; from the Latin for "of one's own will." ...

Strike (business term)
Certification Proceeding (legal term)
American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) (in marketing)
Collective Bargalnlng
Air Traffic Controllers Strike (American history)
boycott (in economics, politics) ...

Strikes
Strike action is the weapon of the workers most associated with industrial disputes, and certainly among the most powerful. In most countries, strikes are legal under a circumscribed set of conditions. Among them may be that: ...

No-strike
Definition - adj
: of, relating to, or being a provision in a collective bargaining agreement prohibiting employees from striking
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"If I strike you, then provided I cause you hurt and that hurt could have been foreseeable to a reasonable man then my conduct amounts to the tort of negligence even if the court is in doubt whether I acted intentionally." ...

three strikes, you're out
n. recent (beginning 1994) legislation enacted in several states ...
three-day notice
n. a notice to pay delinquent rent or quit (leave or vacate) the ...

To strike out; to obliterate, erase or mark for deletion.
Ex Rel:
An abbreviation of "ex relatione", Latin for "on the relation of.

If a fact offered as evidence is immaterial, the court should sustain an objection to its introduction and strike same from the record.

to strike, accuse, condemn; Lat. attingere, tangere, to touch; the meaning has been greatly affected by the confusion with Fr. taindre, teindre, to taint, stain, Lat. tangere, to dye), in English law, ...

" Be brief, be pointed; let your matter stand Lucid in order, solid, and at hand; Spend not your words on trifles, but condense; Strike with the mass of thoughts, not drops of sense; Press to the close with vigor once begun, And leave, ...

If the child has raised his or her hand to strike the parent, or if he or she has actually struck the parent; but a mere threat is not sufficient. 2. If the child has been guilty towards a parent, of cruelty, of a crime, or grievous injury. 3.

employers were often granted injunctions against strikes or boycotts when they alleged that the purpose of labor's activity (e.g., unreasonably limiting the employer's freedom by requiring him to hire only union members) was illegal.

French défense: Latin defensa: defendere, to strike down or away, ward off, repel. Mid. Eng. defence. 2. That which is offered by a defendant as sufficient to defeat a suit - by denying, justifying, or confessing and avoiding, the cause of action.

occurs when a moving vessel strikes a fixed vessel, such as one that is anchored, or a fixed object such as a rock or a pier. It is useful to compare this definition with the definition of a collision which involves two moving vessels.

tries to or does physically strike another, or
acts in a threatening manner to put another in fear of immediate harm.
*Actual physical contact is not necessary; threatening gestures that would alarm any reasonable person can constitute an assault.

Expunge
To physically erase; to white or strike out. To "expunge" something from a court record means to remove every reference to it from the court file.
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An event that no human foresight could anticipate or which if anticipated, is too strong to be considered e.g an industrial strike which leads to loss of profits.

plaintiff [Middle French plaintif, from plaintif, adj., grieving, from plaint lamentation, from Latin planctus, from plangere to strike, beat one's breast, lament] : the party who institutes a legal action or ...

For example, Babe Ruth III invents an electronic device that can signal whether a pitch is a ball or a strike.

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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When a person has been named as a party to a law suit when that person should not have been added. When this is asserted, a court will usually accommodate a request to amend the court documents to strike, or substitute for, ...

Secondary Boycott: An organized refusal to purchase the products of, do business with or perform services for (such as deliver goods) a company which is doing business with another company where the employees are on strike or in a labor dispute.

Misjoinder: When a person has been wrongly named as a party to a law suit, a court will usually amend the proceedings to strike out the name of the misjoined party and substitute the person who should have been joined.

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, in "three strikes" ...

It is especially used of the selection of a special jury, where a panel is prepared by the proper officer, and the parties, in turn, strike off a certain number of names, until the list is reduced to twelve.

When this is asserted, a court will usually accommodate a request to amend the court documents to strike, or substitute for, the name of the mis-joined party. Compare with non-joinder.

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

Law Strict liabilitySua sponte

 
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