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"clause" Definitions
  1. (grammar) a group of words that includes a subject and a verb, and forms a sentence or part of a sentence
  2. an item in a legal document that says that a particular thing must or must not be done

664 Sentences With "clause"

How to use clause in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "clause" and check conjugation/comparative form for "clause". Mastering all the usages of "clause" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The Santa Clause (1994) arrives on the platform this month, as well as The Santa Clause 2 (2002) and The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause (2006).
So far, we've covered the first clause, the Citizenship Clause, and the second, the Privileges and Immunities Clause.
Just like "Home Alone," Disney Plus also features "Santa Clause 2" and "Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause," creating the perfect movie marathon. 
"The Santa Clause 22002: The Escape Clause" (2006) -- No to that pun.
The recess appointments clause (Article 85033, section 2, clause 3) is clear.
"The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause" (2006) was ripped apart by critics.
"It is not an anti-discrimination clause; it is a happy-talk clause," he wrote.
Both the free exercise clause and the establishment clause are a part of that text.
Abbott not only addressed the Establishment Clause about religion but also the Free Speech clause.
The second clause -- "and the voters didn't care" -- directly undermines the argument from the first clause.
Wills are meant to be interpreted in their entirety, not clause by clause, Ms. Anderson's lawyers argue.
He stacked clause upon clause in their sentences, constructing towering and often opaque chains of thought and feeling.
The process culminated in a settlement agreement that included a mutual nondisclosure clause and a mutual nondisparagement clause.
First, the nepotism limitation may be an unconstitutional violation of the Appointments Clause (Article II, Section 2, Clause 2).
The plaintiffs claimed that the statutes violated the Equal Protection Clause and Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
BLANKFEIN: I WOULD SAY IF WE COULD PARSE THAT CLAUSE BY CLAUSE, BUT TO EVERY CLAUSE THE ANSWER IS NO, WE WEREN'T DOING IT. WE WEREN'T MEETING IN SECRET AND WE CERTAINLY WEREN'T PLOTTING THE DESTRUCTION.
If Washington, Obama, or any other president violated the emoluments clause, that simply means that they violated the emoluments clause.
The process culminated in a settlement agreement that included a mutual non-disclosure clause and a mutual non-disparagement clause.
Therefore, the high court held that the Lanham Act's disparagement clause violates the free speech clause of the First Amendment.
One is an aging superstar, with a no-trade clause, the other is a rising star with no such clause.
The agreement included a confidentiality clause, which barred both sides from talking about the dispute, as well as a nondisparagement clause.
"I say, let's put that little clause in, like it's a one-sentence clause, but that clause is going to attract a lot of people, and we're going to make that pipe right here in America, OK?" he said.
"It was already the case in the past, with the investment clause, the structural reforms clause, with the cyclical clause, and, of course, we can also integrate exceptional events due to welcoming refugees or to an earthquake," he said.
Another is the mainly French-speaking province of Quebec, in Canada, where a proposed law is being battled over clause by clause.
It said if the unit had been "aware of APRA's interpretation of the MAC clause, they would have removed the clause earlier".
I seem to remember a three-fifths clause being controversial at one point in American history: This is a one-third clause!
The film made over $189 million in the world box office and over $144 million in the U.S. It was followed by two sequels, The Santa Clause 2 in 2002 and The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause in 2006.
The church says this denial violated the free-exercise clause of the First Amendment and the equal-protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
She presents long passages of text for our inspection, like X-rays, teaching us to read Jane Bowles, for instance, clause by clause.
The plaintiffs allege that their detention and denial of entry violates the due process clause, the equal protection clause, applicable statutes, and treaties.
Among the offended legal principles, they contend, are the Equal Protection Clause; the Establishment Clause; Due Process; and the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).
Walmart argues that the tax is illegal — a violation of both the Commerce Clause and the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution.
However, if you eliminated the second "I" from that example, the second clause would lack a subject, making it not a clause at all.
After mass outrage, Equifax removed the rip-off clause from its TrustedID service, although the rip-off clause remains for Equifax's other consumer services.
Between the Foreign Emoluments Clause, the Domestic Emoluments Clause and The Ineligibility Clause, the issue takes up a lot of space in the Constitution, especially considering they cover an issue that, according to CRS, has never been litigated in a major way in court.
The majority held that a local government could seize private property for the purpose of private redevelopment under the "takings clause" clause of the Constitution.
Tinder first blocked the case by citing the arbitration clause in its Terms of Service, and Kim appealed that clause when the settlement was reached.
While the Constitution's emoluments clause technically refers to states, Noble says there is a strong legal argument that cities are also covered by that clause.
If we were to eliminate the second "I" from that example, the second clause would lack a subject, making it not a clause at all.
The court relied on another part of the 14th amendment, its equal protection clause, and it interpreted language similar to that in the citizenship clause.
Thus, the establishment clause limits the government's ability to advance religion, while the free exercise clause limits the government's ability to target people of faith.
It charged that the city's Non-woven Disposable Products Act (NDPA) violates the First Amendment, the Commerce Clause, and the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause.
FM released their service based on Commons Clause-licensed RediSearch, after in-memory database company Redis Labs placed RediSearch and four other specific add-on modules (but not Redis itself) under Commons Clause, and graph database company Neo4J placed its enterprise codebase under Commons Clause and raised an $80 million Series E. Then Michael DeHaan, creator of Red Hat Ansible, chose Commons Clause for his new project.
The Constitution has a specific clause -- Article I, Section 6, Clause 23 -- that lets legislators say what they want during congressional business without facing legal repercussions.
Was his failure to release his tax returns a reason voters voted for him (first clause) or a non-factor in the 2016 election (second clause)?
And doing so would not impinge on the Qualifications Clause in Article II because Congress ultimately counts the Electoral College votes and can police that Clause.
BREXIT CLAUSE Balfour will stockpile housing materials to battle Brexit-driven delays and has a "Brexit clause" in contracts, Chief Executive Officer Leo Quinn told Reuters.
Otherwise, he explained, the Establishment Clause would have been duplicative of the Free Exercise Clause, which clearly prohibits government action that coerces religious belief or practice.
But there is a clause in the Constitution, the "emoluments clause," which prohibits the president from taking any money from foreign governments — and barring a change to what Trump's business holdings are or who manages them, he'd be violating that clause the minute he took office.
The next step is for parliamentary committees to provide a report, after which the Senate will go through the final version of the bill clause by clause.
"I do not take a position here on whether the statute as currently written is justifiable under the Taxing Clause or the Commerce Clause," Judge Kavanaugh wrote.
But whatever divides exist about invoking the take care clause, this is the extreme case in which it is clear-cut that the clause has been violated.
Perhaps most significantly, Trump and his lawyer did not explain how this plan would address the Domestic Emoluments Clause, even though that clause specifically applies to the president.
The Supreme Court has spent the last century using the Fourteenth Amendment to apply the Bill of Rights to the states, amendment by amendment and clause by clause.
The House's lawyers argue that the deliberations are a legislative act protected by the clause, and that the clause also protects Congress's deliberative processes with respect to impeachment.
While there isn't an enormous body of Supreme Court case law on the Origination Clause, what little there is supports the understanding that the clause would cover tariffs.
Washington's policy lay within the "play in the joints" between the two religion clauses, a choice "permitted by the establishment clause but not required by the free exercise clause".
DROPPED CLAUSE However, the final language excluded a proposed clause to "recognise the pressing need to resolve trade tensions", which was dropped from a previous draft debated on Saturday.
The constitution has an anti-corruption clause to prevent conflicts of interest known as the Emoluments Clause, which prohibits the president from receiving gifts and benefits from foreign governments.
The next step is for parliamentary committees to provide a report within four weeks after which the Senate will go clause by clause through the final version, lawmakers said.
But the paper adds the merger contract has a contract material adverse change clause and the issue is to see whether the coronavirus outbreak could trigger such a clause.
Students are given the root clause, and must complete the sentence with a new clause following each conjunction: Fractions are like decimals because they are all parts of wholes.
The final two clauses, the Due Process Clause and the Equal Protection clause, are a little different, and deal with the rights of all people in the United States.
"There is a real appetite on the part of the conservative majority to rapidly expand the Free Exercise Clause while shrinking the Establishment Clause to a vanishing point," he said.
The resolution calls on the U.S. House of Representatives to review whether Trump's many business interests violate the foreign emoluments clause or the domestic emoluments clause of the U.S. Constitution.
Tellingly, the UMTA was founded under the Welfare Clause of the Constitution, not the Commerce Clause that authorized highway construction, because it is good for cities to have good transportation.
"I do not take a position here on whether the statute as currently written is justifiable under the Taxing Clause or the Commerce Clause," Kavanaugh wrote, sidestepping the larger issues.
The law that passed is a diluted version of previous drafts which included a clause to legalize the formation of villages and small towns for Jews only, a clause which put Israel's Jewish identity above its democratic system, and a clause that would order the courts to make verdicts according to Jewish law.
In 2013, the federal appeals court in Manhattan rejected a challenge to the rules under the U.S. Constitution, whose free speech clause is narrower than the clause in New York's constitution.
They included in the Constitution a clause — the so-called emoluments clause -- that prohibits officers of the United States from accepting anything of value from foreign governments without explicit congressional permission.
Because various open-source projects use various open-source licenses, when releasing software using Commons Clause, one must specify to which underlying permissive open-source license one is attaching Commons Clause.
" Among those powers granted in Section 8, Clause 1 is the "power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises," and in Clause 85033 "to regulate commerce with foreign nations.
Although Kaepernick's annual salary was in the range of what top quarterbacks were getting — he was guaranteed almost $13 million in 2014 — there was clause after clause that benefited the team.
It has shrunk noticeably at the hands of the current Supreme Court, in contrast to the First Amendment's other religion clause, the Free Exercise clause, much in favor with today's majority.
Among the most important changes is that the department's central office will assume a more direct role in cases involving the Free Exercise Clause, Establishment Clause, and Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
" Another help for SPAC investors: There's an "out clause.
The Commerce Power derives from two constitutional provisions: (85033) the Commerce Clause, which grants Congress authority to "regulate Commerce ... among the several States," and (2) the Necessary and Proper Clause, which says Congress may "make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution" certain itemized grants—including the Commerce Clause.
Similar language in the 13th Amendment, which is alternatively referred to as the "exception clause" or the "punishment clause," has been criticized by those affiliated with movements like the National Prison Strike.
The clause is specific to New Jersey and is not found in the federal Constitution, though the establishment clause has been interpreted as barring the appropriation of taxpayer dollars to religious groups.
" Retirement with a clause and Ken Shamrock "I retired from MMA with a clause—I would fight again if I had one of three opponents: Mark Coleman, Royce Gracie or Ken Shamrock.
Whenever Chinese, American or other foreign delegations meet, if the two sides are sitting at a long table that allows for substantive, clause-by-clause negotiations, flickers of optimism may be justified.
I'm not sure if she's really defined by her role as Mother Nature in The Santa Clause 2 and The Santa Clause 3, but the movies get plenty of play come December.
An analysis from congressional legal advisers cautioned that the bill's provisions limiting drug prices could run afoul of the Fifth Amendment's takings clause as well as the Eighth Amendment's excessive fines clause.
Both the Supremacy Clause and the dormant Cmmerce Clause protect broadband Internet service providers ("ISPs") from a patchwork of inconsistent regulations that are impossible for them to comply with as a practical matter.
Messitte disagreed with the Justice Department's argument that it should be Congress's job to enforce the Foreign Emoluments Clause (the Domestic Emoluments Clause doesn't include an oversight role for Congress, the judge noted).
The foreign emoluments clause forbids the president from profiting off foreign governments, and the domestic emoluments clause limits the president's ability to profit off of either the federal government or a state government.
The first clause of that amendment is the most radically democratic clause in the entire Constitution, much of which was designed to limit what the Founders considered the dangers of too much democracy.
Legal grounds: Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson argued that the ban violates the Constitution's Equal Protection clause of the First Amendment's Establishment Clause, due process rights, and the federal Immigration and Nationality Act.
Delbanco highlights the especially tortured syntax of the fugitive slave clause (Article 4, Section 2, Clause 3) to show how the founding document, "so filled with euphemism and circumlocution," was littered with bombshells.
This is called the equal protection clause, and this clause will be used again and again, really all the way up until now, to guarantee that all Americans are treated as equal citizens.
"The spirit and the objectives of the Paris Agreement are being eroded clause by clause, discussion by discussion," Simon Stiell, the environment minister of Grenada, said as the negotiations entered the final stretch.
Related to the "conscience" clause is the binding of delegates.
The text of the clause seeks to strike a balance.
A confidentiality clause prevents both sides from discussing the settlement.
Democrats in Congress also sued under the Foreign Emoluments Clause.
" He dismissed the criticism calling it "this phony emoluments clause.
Under the previous law, the stability clause was 30 years.
Palin relies heavily on this particular kind of dependent clause.
We have in the Constitution something called the Appointments Clause.
Like Grice, Scalia thought that the clause should be relevant.
Protections under the previous code's stability clause were axed entirely.
They must also not be bound by Uber's arbitration clause.
The final clause relates to the commercialization of wearables data.
But too bad, because you can't ever waive that clause.
We cannot allow the direct violation of the Emoluments Clause.
The clause applies when a bank fails a stress test.
Bangladesh law allows for detainment without charge under clause 54.
Democratic lawmakers quickly blasted the clause as well Ohio Sen.
The last clause in that sentence contains no typographical errors.
I feel that dogma is detrimental to any interesting clause.
The women also asked Uber to waive its arbitration clause.
I guess there would have been some clause in there.
"This is a violation of the Emoluments Clause," Eisen tweeted.
Wade under the due process clause of the 14th Amendment.
That's exactly what the emoluments clause was written to prohibit.
After an outcry, Trump explicitly endorsed NATO's mutual defense clause.
I have done my best to abide by this clause.
The Establishment Clause restricts the government's ability to advance religion.
But a sunset clause is an exit ramp to nowhere.
It's possible the judge will refuse to enforce the clause.
Moreover, the Necessary and Proper Clause recognizes some additional authority.
"The Double Jeopardy Clause bars that result," his lawyers argue.
The emoluments clause bars presidents from profiting from foreign governments.
After a backlash, the company dropped the forced arbitration clause.
To be sure, the take care clause is rarely invoked.
This argument centers around the Appointments Clause in the Constitution.
"There is no sunset clause in the JCPOA," Araqchi said.
In November 2017, both Kaplan and Straus triggered the clause.
The compensation clause is not likely to be celebrated today.
The trade agreement contains a clause that calls for consultations if a natural disaster or other unforeseeable economic event delays compliance, although China has not invoked that clause in reaction to the coronavirus epidemic.
"Freedom of expression is still being threatened as long as clause 66(d) exists," said activist Maung Saung Kha, who was jailed for six months for defamation under he law, referring to the contentious clause.
How Wells Fargo is taking advantage of a hidden clause inside almost every customer agreement How Wells Fargo is taking advantage of a hidden clause inside almost every customer agreement This piece has been corrected.
While the new government values the security of contracts, "the company has to respect that we have the right as Panamanians to review clause by clause," Cortizo, who takes office on July 1, told reporters.
Once an exception, the opt-out clause has become the norm.
Holliday's no-trade clause might actually be a pretty good idea.
Those 200 Democrats claim that Trump is violating the emoluments clause.
But Trudeau objected strenuously to a sunset clause of any length.
A 591-word clause in the DPP's charter begs to differ.
The same clause applies to his new agreement ending Dec. 31.
That clause bars presidents from accepting foreign gifts without congressional permission.
Happy hour conversations include the 25th Amendment and the Emoluments Clause.
Against all odds, Craig's performance in it earns that "introducing" clause.
It contains no such covenant not to sue or arbitration clause.
You name the labor right violation clause, and it is there.
The removal of the immunity clause from the Communications Decency Act?
The sunset clause likewise remained a sticking point, the source added.
Redis Labs released certain add-on modules as Apache + Commons Clause.
The Commons Clause as of this writing is at version 1.0.
That clause guarantees a representative form of government in each state.
You can impeach Trump now for the DC hotel/emoluments clause.
And an arbitration clause is buried in T-Mobile's fine print.
One clause downgrades the Arabic language from official to "special" standing.
The next clause in the terms of service is more concerning.
Protection Clause on its head by requiring states to dilute minority
It's called an arbitration clause, and it protects companies from lawsuits.
The source did not say what the clause on trade entails.
It was the Speech and Debate clause that gave then-Sen.
He boasted about inserting a "little clause" to enforce the requirement.
Here is the new clause, from page 161 (View document here).
Now imagine that clause is permanent, and can never be waived.
Removal of the pay-raise clause was among the seven amendments.
The clause entitles managers to receive three year's pay upon departure.
Still, there's debate as to whether MPS qualifies for this clause.
The first requirement, Clause One of DPA limitations: no personal data.
The constitution's emoluments clause prohibits the president from receiving foreign gifts.
In addition, the notes also include an optional interest deferral clause.
Tribe says that the Clause covers "ordinary, fair market value" transactions.
Let them read the history of the impeachment and removal clause.
The court face-off involves the Emoluments Clause of the Constitution.
"It's not a slam dunk" despite the preemption clause, Martin said.
The courts have read a separate sovereigns exception into the clause.
Her contract at EY contained a forced arbitration clause, Ward said.
The emoluments clause is largely unexplored legal territory, the judge noted.
"It could definitely present a free exercise clause challenge," Francisco responded.
This vulnerability is the principal byproduct of baseball's notorious reserve clause.
"It's not a wonderful honor, it's an escape clause," she said.
One way to revive the Guarantee Clause would be through Congress.
Exercising the clause would allow a new contract to be negotiated.
They argue Whitaker's appointment violates the Appointments Clause of the Constitution.
These facts alone undeniably prove a violation of the Emoluments Clause.
GDPR has a clause excepting work in the overwhelming public interest.
Use a comma after a dependent clause that starts a sentence
The similar, emoluments-clause cases against Trump have produced varying results.
He adds that his contract does not contain a release clause.
Legal experts said the contingency clause probably violated state bar rules.
The Supreme Court has interpreted the "speech or debate" clause broadly.
A lower court ruled that this violated the Constitution's Appointments Clause.
"The pardon clause expressly does not apply to impeachment," Dellinger said.
The lottery winner clause, for example, appears to be a gimmick.
Such burdens raise concerns about constitutionality under the Dormant Commerce Clause.
How many other government contracts have included a no-audit clause?
There is no criminal law punishing violations of the Emoluments Clause.
The Constitution's emoluments clause prohibits the president from receiving foreign gifts.
Trump's lawyers have argued he has not violated the emoluments clause.
Would Ferlinghetti, like many of us, consider a morality clause immoral?
He appears to be in violation of the Constitution's emoluments clause.
If they do not, Britton could then exercise an out clause.
And that when they do, she implied, they remember that clause.
Ask Real Estate Your lease probably includes a clause prohibiting alterations.
We don't know if this clause is included in their prenup.
Johnson said it raises serious questions under the Equal Protection clause, which requires states to treat an individual in the same manner as others in similar conditions and circumstances, as well as the Due Process clause.
Instead of arguing that the Pledge violates the First Amendment's establishment clause, they have started arguing that it violates the Fourteenth Amendment's equal-protection clause, because it presents an occasion for nonbelieving children to be ostracized.
The question whether Congress can designate members of the Financial Board under the Territorial Clause without running afoul of the Appointment Clause requires addressing the structural limitations, if any, that the Constitution imposes on its authority.
In other words, at that time, well before our federal government became the lumbering behemoth it is today, the Supreme Court took the view that the Constitution's Commerce Clause was primarily a "free-trade zone" clause.
Article 85033, section 7, clause 2 of the Constitution, also known as the Presentment Clause, clearly states there are two paths for a bill to become a law once it passes the both chambers of Congress.
The party's charter still features a clause advocating eventual official independence in the form of a Republic of Taiwan, although in July Ms. Tsai proposed replacing the clause with language that favors maintaining the status quo.
But almost 150 years later, a majority in the Supreme Court decided the amendment's equal protection clause and due process clause ensured that the government must recognize marriages of both opposite-sex and same-sex couples.
Read the motion for the restraining order Emoluments Clause Just three days after Trump took office, the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington sued the President, alleging that Trump violated the Emoluments Clause of the Constitution.
They add the rule violates the Spending Clause, which says states cannot be financially coerced into adopting preferred federal policies, while elevating certain religious beliefs above others in violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.
The Emoluments Clause "...you people, with this phony Emoluments Clause..." -- October 21 exchange with reporters at Cabinet meeting Facts First: There's nothing phony about the Constitution's prohibitions against the President receiving payments from foreign and domestic governments.
What would probably happen is that the losing candidate would probably file a lawsuit in federal courts under the equal protection clause and argue that the conduct of Ohio's elections was flawed under the equal protection clause.
Over the last century, however, the Supreme Court has used a legal doctrine known as selective incorporation to apply the Bill of Rights' protections to state and local governments as well—amendment by amendment, clause by clause.
Mr. Ailes's lawyers have said that the dispute has to be settled in arbitration because of a clause in Ms. Carlson's contract; Ms. Carlson's lawyers have argued that her arbitration clause did not explicitly mention Mr. Ailes.
But the new North American trade deal signed this past fall also included a clause, known as the "China clause," which many saw as a blatant push to block any free-trade deal between China and Canada.
They're also accusing Trump of violating the foreign emoluments clause, which bars public officials from receiving gifts from foreign governments without Congress's consent, and the domestic emoluments clause, which bars the president from profiting from his office.
However, the controversial clause was then removed from the notes' documents entirely.
The "natural born" clause is different from the other qualifications for office.
India in 2017 relaxed the rules by abolishing the five-year clause.
This clause, interestingly, has angered both the law's supporters and its opponents.
It will include a full no-trade clause, which Harper could waive.
U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May invoked the exit clause in March 2017.
Lyft also includes a forced-arbitration clause in its terms of service.
That brings back into play any simultaneous death clause or survivorship provisions.
And it includes a withdrawal clause, standard in these types of deals.
Force majeure is a contract clause to remove liability for unavoidable catastrophes.
Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Mr Obama wisely invoked this clause.
He noted that no clause in the agreement allows for its cancellation.
The clause reaches any trademark that disparages any person, group, or institution.
The wolf nodded to each clause and shook a paw to sign.
At least I know I have a no trade clause now. pic.twitter.
Saturday, MTV) Saturday, November 24 Holiday SpecialsThe Santa Clause (7:45 p.m.
This clause also allowed Mozilla to walk away at its sole discretion.
THE non-compete clause has been causing trouble for over 600 years.
This makes the prefatory clause a rather odd bit of throat-clearing.
The shippers now include a so-called "Venezuela clause" in their contracts.
The First Amendment's establishment clause bars discrimination on the basis of religion.
That's enough to satisfy the "natural-born citizen" clause in the Constitution.
Sheldon says the clause about licensed premises should be done away with.
The clause, de Castro noted, would have made Mourinho liable for tax.
Duterte wants death-by-hanging, with an additional gruesome "double" hanging clause.
The emotional distress clause in the California law also caused some confusion.
And private schools would have been exempt from the "reasonable accommodation" clause.
It makes sense: spending clause legislation should not undermine the states' independence.
This was for some project called The Marriage Clause I guess. pic.twitter.
Liberals don't count his Fourth Amendment cases or the confrontation clause cases.
Any ongoing foreign business relationship threatens to violate the Constitution's Emoluments Clause.
The Constitution's emoluments clause prohibits presidents from accepting payments from foreign governments.
A governmental preference among religions is precisely what the Establishment Clause prohibits.
The mandate often appears as a fine-print clause in customer agreements.
It calls "Most of the time" a subordinate clause, among other lapses.
An emergency clause in the bill allows it to take effect immediately.
They also can't rely on those retailers as an escape clause anymore.
Currently, that document includes a clause requiring that Japan renounce all war.
A confidentiality clause prohibited the accuser from speaking publicly about the arrangement.
It also included a clause barring Suu Kyi from running for president.
But only federal employees would be covered by this back-pay clause.
First and foremost is the Due Process clause of the U.S. Constitution.
The groups say the restrictions violate the 14th Amendment's due process clause.
The Roe court identified that limitation in the Constitution's due process clause.
It infuriates textualists and undermines the important function of the origination clause.
In May, Uber also ended its arbitration clause for sexual misconduct claims.
The EU has insisted on a "backstop" clause in any Brexit treaty.
"It's not there to protect a competitor," he said of the clause.
Ultimately, Mr. Abe wants to revise the pacifist clause in the Constitution.
The emoluments clause prohibits federal officials from taking payments from foreign governments.
But Macri said a key clause allowing leniency agreements had been removed.
Previously, activating UNASUR's democracy clause would have been a diplomatic Hail Mary.
I think they will still argue Establishment Clause and religious discrimination issues.
Ask for that exclusivity clause if you're over the casual-dating thing.
A contractual clause, existent or no, made it difficult to talk about.
A "release clause" in his contract means he is open to leaving.
"A general clause usually speaks to the things inside it," she said.
He worried that a house-sale clause could be unfair to me.
Skeptics argue that the clause will not deter endless litigation in courts.
He was unwilling to listen to me and I added a clause.
"The Equal Protection Clause does not require absolute equality," Powell famously wrote.
It's right there in the Constitution -- Article I, Section 5, clause 2.
The Emoluments Clause says elected officials cannot collect proceeds from foreign powers.
That's precisely why our forefathers wrote the Commerce Clause into the Constitution.
Barcelona said Dembélé's contract would have a buyout clause of €400 million.
So where does all this leave the Hall and its character clause?
Historically, the emoluments clause has gone largely unchallenged in the court system.
Some merger agreements now include a "Weinstein Clause" in case misconduct emerges.
United States, upheld the constitutionality of Title II under the commerce clause.
But once the DNI steps in, that workaround clause is essentially nullified.
"I don't really think the trade clause is the issue," Anthony said.
But some justices said the Constitution's due process clause might require them.
But passengers bothered by the arbitration clause can do little about it.
This clause would force another renegotiation of the agreement every five years.
The current proceedings have demonstrated how fragile the Constitution's impeachment clause is.
How can an employee find out if they signed an arbitration clause?
The clause also cuts off completely qualified candidates from running at all.
The natural-born citizen clause may have served some purpose in 1787.
Many companies, like Chipotle, also make employees sign a non-disparagement clause.
All of this, ethics lawyers argue, would violate the Constitution's emoluments clause.
This sort of clause is common in contracts throughout the surveillance industry.
A federal judge in Maryland heard arguments on Trump's latest effort to knock out a lawsuit filed by the District of Columbia and Maryland accusing the president of violating the Constitution's Foreign Emoluments Clause and Domestic Emoluments Clause.
"If the state or the city - any governmental entity - affords benefits to opposite-sex couples, under the Equal Protection Clause and the Due Process clause, they must also provide them to same sex (couples)," he told the court.
" The Appointments Clause of the Constitution, Article II, Section 2, Clause 2, Conway wrote, "means Mr. Trump's installation of Matthew Whitaker as acting attorney general of the United States after forcing the resignation of Jeff Sessions is unconstitutional.
Be clear that the Constitution is soiled with the stain of slavery — the three-fifths clause, the requirement that fugitive slaves be returned, the clause allowing the international slave trade to persist for a generation after its ratification.
But he distanced the administration from the bill, citing budget scoring concerns and the way its provisions limiting drug prices could run afoul of the Fifth Amendment's takings clause as well as the Eighth Amendment's excessive fines clause.
The issue is whether his First-Amendment rights are violated when the public-sector collective bargaining agreement includes an agency-fee clause (some call it a fair-share clause) requiring all employees of the unit to pay union dues.
So if the Supreme Court upholds the First Circuit's application of the appointments clause to Puerto Rico without offering a new explanation why the clause shouldn't also apply to its governor, it could doom territorial — and district — home rule.
The only thing that might apply is the "intentionally misleading" clause, but B.o.
Koza proposed an interstate compact, enforceable through the impairments clause of the Constitution.
But it later asked regulators earlier this year to implement the grandfather clause.
The clause applies to all who hold "office" in the United States government.
"With Coco, there's a 'Don't Google Daddy' clause," the actor joked last July.
Danius's contract had no clause regarding her period of notice or severance pay.
For that reason, I'm not gonna let that clause exist in the bet.
A clause labelling Cuba as progressing towards a "communist society" has been dropped.
CREW is cocounsel with Maryland and DC in the Maryland emoluments clause case.
Many or most loan documents have a clause providing for this, bankers said.
Within the Japanese Constitution you will find Article 237, the international peace clause.
She made sure to include an anti-fur clause in her modeling contract.
In turn, that could conceivably trigger his injury clause and net him $27.5m.
Several lawsuits have been filed accusing Trump of violating the Constitution's emolument clause.
But no one appears ever to have been prosecuted for violating the clause.
He hopes to use the time to amend the constitution's clause on pacifism.
In nine words, it has just one subordinate clause: "why it would be".
The National Labor Relations Board has not condemned that kind of confidentiality clause.
For one thing, there's nothing about this rarely invoked clause that needs settling.
This year he announced plans to rewrite the constitution's pacifist clause by 2020.
The conscience clause came into existence after abortion was considered a constitutional right.
The Trump administration is really trying to expand the reach of conscience clause.
The amnesty clause couldn't save them even if it was a real thing.
He won the election against Lorenzo Sanz, and immediately met Figo's transfer clause.
The Amnesty Clause was added to the NBA's Collective Bargaining Agreement in 403.
The banks were found to have not adequately flagged this clause to customers.
Several Finnish media have reported that the government has considered scrapping the clause.
He knows if the carpets were cleaned and every clause in the contract.
As to the Foreign Emoluments Clause, Trump's plan is not remotely sufficient either.
The revised policy is much less likely to violate the Due Process Clause.
It's an allegation of the violation of the 14th Amendment's due process clause.
Already, a liberal-funded watchdog group has filed a lawsuit citing the clause.
It's one of the really cool things about having a no-trade clause.
When the Supreme Court further upheld the Equal Rights clause under Obergefell vs.
The clause was written into the constitution in 22016 by the military government.
This clause requires presidents to "take care" that the laws "are faithfully executed".
The FCC documents have a six-month confidentiality clause which was recently lifted.
Critics say that the payments from Secret Service could violate the emoluments clause.
To quell concerns, a proposal known as a switch-over clause was dropped.
But Missouri had an Establishment Clause concern that went beyond protecting secular values.
The clause bars government officials from receiving gifts or payments from foreign leaders.
The scrapping of the stepchild adoption clause was part of the resulting compromise.
The court was unequivocal in answering whether Epic's arbitration clause violated the law.
She was also free from any noncompete clause, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
She confirmed that Ms. Zoumer was fired for not signing the arbitration clause.
He also accused Trump of possibly violating the Emoluments Clause of the Constitution.
Canada and Mexico oppose several U.S. demands, like a five-year sunset clause.
The National Rifle Association came out against the act because of the clause.
In May, a federal court tossed out the subsidiary's claims under one clause.
They also want to keep an automatic sunset clause out of the agreement.
We all agree that the Excessive Fines Clause is incorporated against the states.
A separate constitutional clause bars the president from receiving payments from foreign governments.
But the clause also prevents the branches from intruding on one another's authority.
The clause calls for an actual count of the population every 10 years.
Some of the most vociferous objections relate to the so-called Monsanto Clause.
She filed a demand for arbitration to determine the enforceability of Fitbit's clause.
Holder), to expand the Takings Clause to stymie environmental protection legislation (Palazzolo v.
Board of Education, which rested upon the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause instead.
"We won't pay a cent," Toninelli said, adding a compensation clause was void.
"The president's violations of the emoluments clause are blatant and ongoing," he said.
The offer included deferred money and did not include an opt-out clause.
Drug companies lobbied Congress to include the noninterference clause in the 2003 law.
The confusion is understandable: The oath of naturalization has a nearly identical clause.
The Constitution's emoluments clause is about payments from foreign governments to current officeholders.
FCC, holding that the TCPA's debt-collection exception violates the Free Speech Clause.
This theory, if it takes hold in law, significantly weakens the Establishment Clause.
Equifax has since changed the clause, giving consumers the ability to opt out.
On Saturday the channel airs "The Santa Clause" film series, starring Tim Allen.
And almost all of America's treaties contain the Investor State Dispute Settlement clause.
Here's a test of your understanding of the impeachment clause of the Constitution.
The legislation did not include any sunset clause, as sought by the banks.
The Montana clause is a 1972 re-enactment of one adopted in 1889.
Protestors have projected the Constitution's emoluments clause onto the side of the building.
And she says that both male and female founders have adopted the clause.
Challenging the reserve clause was essential to the blossoming sport we have today.
There is a legitimate place in a contract for the "liquidated damages" clause.
Pelosi eventually agreed to self-impose term limits, albeit with an escape clause.
Nothing in the First Amendment's Free Speech Clause justifies that kind of discrimination.
THINGS LIKE THE MOST FAVORED NATION CLAUSE WHICH ALLOWS FOR THESE NONRECIPROCAL TARIFFS.
Meanwhile, the other two emoluments clause cases are pending before other appeals courts.
Lawsuits have been filed against President Trump, claiming he has violated the clause.
The No. 1 NAFTA provision that does this is the investor-state clause.
The "David Hogg" video was cited under a clause banning harassment and bullying.
Feinstein and Durbin, in their language, seemed perilously close to violating that clause.
The only remedy for a serious violation of the Emoluments Clause is impeachment.
The commerce clause of the Constitution authorizes federal action to resolve this problem.
He was criticized for that, and some critics cited the take care clause.
RITA PASARELL We were offered this settlement agreement that contained a nondisclosure clause.
Trump's official position is that the emoluments clause does not apply to him.
The third is a proposed amendment to the pacifist clause of the constitution to make it clear that the Self-Defence Forces, Japan's army in all but name, is legal (the government has abandoned the idea of scrapping the clause altogether).
Both lawsuits raise a host of constitutional complaints, including that the ban contravenes the due-process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and discriminates against Muslims in violation of the equal-protection clause and the First Amendment rule against establishing religion.
The test comes from another clause in the First Amendment—the establishment clause—and asks whether a reasonable observer would interpret a certain religious display (the Ten Commandments, for example, or a nativity scene) as a government endorsement of religion.
The California and Maryland rulings, meanwhile, relied on both the APA and the constitution's Enumeration Clause (also known as the Census Clause)—an instruction to Congress to conduct an "actual enumeration" of everyone living in the country every ten years.
The two conservatives would have used a different mechanism to incorporate the 8th Amendment, they wrote, relying on the 14th Amendment's privileges and immunities clause, rather than its due process clause, as Ginsburg and the rest of the court did.
It also has a clause that allows the entire law to be nullified if the abortion ban clause is struck down, making access to reproductive health care a bargaining chip in the effort to expand healthcare more broadly through new technology.
The classic 2003 Will Ferrell movie Elf is number 6 with $103, Tim Allen's 1994 movie The Santa Clause comes in at 7 with $144.8 million and while its sequel, The Santa Clause 2, follows at number 8 with $139.2 million.
Conjunctions join clauses (a clause has a verb and usually a subject as well): and, but and or are the most common conjunctions, but than is also a conjunction when it joins clause like he loves flowers more than she does.
While Furman ruled the challengers' case can proceed under their claims that the question violated the Due Process Clause of the Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act, he dismissed their claim that Ross had violated the Enumeration Clause of the Constitution.
Although as you're reporting on things like the Mozilla clause and all this kind of stuff, and the accelerated RSUs and the buyer was going to have to pay out to the employees … Did you like that Mozilla clause story?
Competition from these companies — often government-subsidized — is often unfair; a clause in Nafta regulating the participation of state-owned firms in North America would serve as an argument in favor of including a similar clause for World Trade Organization rules.
The Emoluments Clause of the U.S. Constitution prohibits any person "holding an Office of Profit or Trust" from receiving payments from a foreign country, which clause includes retired military officers, according to a clarification from the Department of Defense in 2013.
"Admit", "learn" and other words like them presuppose the truth of the following clause.
But ultimately, whether an arbitration clause is thrown out is determined by the court.
Organizers want the company to make discrimination and harassment cases exempt from this clause.
But Holliday has a very, very, specific no-trade clause in his new deal.
The second was constitutional, and relied on the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.
They argued the alcohol is unique, and not subject to regular commerce clause scrutiny.
But Lundqvist has a no-trade clause and says he wants to stick around.
"To my mind [the words in the exception clause] are entirely surplusage," Massachusetts Sen.
The world "emolument" may sound archaic, but the goal of the clause is clear.
The DPP tried to freeze the clause in 2014, but no decision was made.
This violated the so-called "dormant" Commerce Clause in the constitution, the court ruled.
The lawsuit accuses the state of violating the Supremacy Clause of the US Constitution.
In theory, the Constitution's Emolument Clause forbids presidents from taking money from foreign powers.
And the backstop rule is just an emergency clause that should never be used.
For decades, government agencies have used the Emoluments clause to guide their ethics rulings.
Rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, had called for the clause to be repealed.
The Catholic Church in Italy warmly saluted the elimination of the stepchild adoption clause.
If they do sign it, however, the courts will likely enforce the arbitration clause.
That agreement included a non-disclosure clause pertaining to speaking negatively of the company.
A perfect example is this idea of a sunset clause on a trade deal.
They point to an apparent arbitration clause in Carlson's employment contract with Fox News.
An obscure clause in the Constitution could pose problems for President-elect Donald Trump.
A second danger lies in the other clause of that emerging-market catch-22.
Stakeholders argue that putting such a clause in place would create uncertainty for investments.
Congregation Shearith Israel, the Free Exercise Clause means courts can't interfere with religious autonomy.
Indiana that the 8th Amendment's Excessive Fines Clause applies to state and local governments.
Regarding the interpretation of the emoluments clause, the CREW response is even more convincing.
Lawmakers inserted an emergency clause allowing it to take effect immediately upon Bevin's signature.
The clause said they would arbitrate disputes instead of suing Wells Fargo in court.
The Court declines to relegate its Establishment Clause analysis to a purely mathematical exercise.
It&aposs not clear whether or not Moonves&apos contact contains such a clause.
One clause of the bill downgrades the Arabic language from official to "special" standing.
Another illegal clause put controls on how partner websites could display rival search ads.
The clause would give the EU a stronger hand in enforcement of the deal.
There's a clause hidden in most of the long company contracts no one reads.
Neymar's exercise of his release clause at Barca cost his new employers $263 million.
Today's clients might welcome the ability to add this penalty clause to their contracts.
But Trump and Dillon argued that the Emoluments Clause doesn't necessarily apply to Trump.
Yet the double jeopardy clause does not prevent a retrial after a hung jury.
The charge levelled against Access is specific, namely an alleged breach of Clause 22012.
But, without a morals clause, that doesn't necessarily hold sway over an artist's contract.
The European Parliament's transport committee said the clause would put a brake on innovation.
" Make sure the estate plans of you and your spouse have a "Titanic clause.
Without more information, the clause itself looks like a pretty naked limit on competition.
This isn't the first time Dataminr has run up against Twitter's anti-surveillance clause.
Should it activate Article 5, the mutual defense clause of the security group's charter?
More than likely, the owner considered that to be an easy clause to sign.
So for his deportation, the government relied on Section 16(b)—the residual clause.
He invoked the clause in 1998 and was released, becoming an immediate free agent.
Also, the clause about notifying the other partner before hooking up with someone else?
" And the Spending Clause gives Congress the sole "Power To lay and collect Taxes . . .
Unsurprisingly, the ERA's political protection clause registers over 80 percent approval among union households.
Uber and Lyft, the ride-hailing services, make their drivers sign an arbitration clause.
The clause is a way for the parties to allocate risk in an acquisition.
If a dependent clause ends the sentence, however, it no longer requires a comma.
"You can also use nor with a negative first clause or sentence including "not.
Should they highlight relatively esoteric matters, like his potential violations of the Emoluments Clause?
The War Powers Clause in the Constitution grants Congress the right to declare war.
" That clause, however, was ultimately rejected in favor of "other high crimes and misdemeanors.
This case should have gone to court but was blocked by a ripoff clause.
"Under the Supremacy Clause of our Constitution, federal law preempts state law," she argues.
In the last major Commerce Clause case before the 1990s, 1942's Wickard v.
The market-value clause made cost-conscious utilities unwilling to buy the specialized product.
One of Terpin's lawyers, however, said the arbitration clause will not be an issue.
The full moon on the 20th could even bring a proposal or exclusivity clause.
One clause, however, is specifically reserved for married women: abortion because of contraceptive failure.
GOT The insertion of a clause stating that Cameron's deal was a final offer.
The issue was whether this breached the "equal protection clause" in the 14th Amendment.
The issue here was whether the system violated the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause.
The much-abused Commerce Clause of the Constitution still stands to protect interstate trade.
The Guarantee Clause limped on until the 1912 case Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph v.
Department of Health and Human Services, Kavanaugh unspooled his interpretation of Origination Clause history.
The Emoluments Clause – Article 1 Section 85033 of the Constitution – is clear and unambiguous.
Why not change this clause to exclude the hyper-controversial West Bank settlement project?
But Stanton invoked his no-trade clause and engineered a deal with the Yankees.
He exercised his opt-out clause the next winter after another strong season — a .
Until the last clause, this tracks with Clinton's public criticism of Sanders almost exactly.
There is no chance the Supreme Court will be receptive to Establishment Clause arguments.
In theory, the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution, as interpreted in Batson v.
The State Supreme Court appellate panel said the president's lawyers had misinterpreted the clause.
The provision "exudes deference to the president in every clause," the chief justice said.
He proposed using an exit clause for emergencies to get around the debt brake.
One way would be to convince the court that the arbitration clause is unenforceable.
He also maintains a no-trade clause that gives him power over his exit.
In fact, a "separate but equal" clause had actually been written into the law.
The men had contended that the second trial violated the Constitution's double jeopardy clause.
He later sued the bank, saying it violated a confidentiality clause in that agreement.
It also was not immediately clear why the Trump Organization objected to the clause.
Trump needs to immediately divest from his businesses and comply with the emoluments clause.
Equifax could remove this clause so that consumers can receive this service without condition.
They haggled over every word, and every clause, of the document they were drafting.
That's why our founders wrote the impeachment clause to be broader than criminal activity.
" Justice Gorsuch placed special emphasis on the oath's concluding clause: "So help me God.
It is time to remove the non-interference clause from the Social Security law.
The emoluments clause bars the president from receiving gifts and payments from foreign governments.
In a 4-3 decision, Canada's Supreme Court ruled that the clause is unenforceable.
The DMA claimed that the law violated the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
The reserve clause was finally thrown out by the arbitrator on December 19863, 1975.
This is not really consistent with the original meaning of the Interstate Commerce Clause.
Cole's contract also features a full no-trade clause, according to multiple media reports.
The clause, known as Article 85033, has only ever been invoked once: the Sept.
That's because this triggers legalistic issues related to the emoluments clause of the Constitution.
If they do sign it, however, the courts will likely enforce the arbitration clause.
The question of which clause trumps the other is central to the legality argument.
She piles detail on top of detail in her long, elaborate, multi-clause sentences.
He has acknowledged that the take care clause has teeth at least once recently.
Timbs asks whether the excessive fines clause does indeed apply equally in every state.
DUBLIN (Reuters) - Ireland is open to creative language and creative solutions but will not change its position that a border backstop clause in a Brexit deal can have no expiry date or unilateral exit clause, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said on Tuesday.
MADRID, May 24 (Reuters) - Spanish state-owned train operator Renfe will remove a clause in a contract for 30 high speed trains which favours manufacturers operating in Spain following a court ruling against the clause, the public works ministry said on Tuesday.
Citron notes that Gorsuch, like Scalia, has shown support for federalism by arguing against the idea of a "dormant commerce clause," or the idea that the Constitution's Commerce Clause not only allows Congress to regulate interstate commerce but bans states from doing so.
With our first proposal, Commons Clause, we took the most straightforward approach: we constructed one clause, which can be added to any liberal open-source license, preventing the licensee from "Selling" the software  —  where "Selling" includes running it as a commercial service.
The Hart-Cellar Act, amended the INA, abolished the national origins quota system, and created a preference system based on family relationships and immigrant skills; The Establishment Clause of the First Amendment: This clause prohibits government actions that favor one religion over another.
The federal appeals court in Boston held that appointments to the board were inconsistent with the Appointments Clause of the Constitution, but the board is asking the top court to reverse the decision on the grounds that the clause does not apply.
However, the Foreign Emoluments Clause can provide no redress in relation to a president's foreign entanglements either in the courts or through the impeachment process, for the simple reason that the clause does not cover the president or any other elected officials.
Legal writing expert Bryan Garner advocated in 2012 for "shall" to be deleted entirely from legal prose: In most legal instruments, shall violates the presumption of consistency: Words are presumed to have a consistent meaning in clause after clause, page after page.
Some teams, for example, have interpreted the Article 2 clause as simply being an allowance for teams to notify their drivers of an imminent critical failure, and not actually as a clause that allows them to tell drivers how to fix it.
One draft clause could legalize animal performances if a provincial-level government granted a permit.
Protection Clause, but its reasoning shares much with Obergefell with regard to the Fourteenth Amendment.
He expected the revised clause to disappear completely during October as conditions become more transparent.
Now the Appointments Clause of the United States Constitution, President Trump didn&apost write that.
And how is it that he hasn&apost violated the Appointments Clause of the Constitution?
The treaty has a key clause meant to keep the industry from unduly influencing delegations.
Gizmodo was only alerted to the clause after this post was published with beta screenshots.
Zuckerberg concluded with a kind of get-out clause and attempt to reassure the community.
"Clearly, a clause that cancels the agreement every five years totally defangs it," Vogel said.
"The Foreign Emoluments Clause was forged of the Framers' hard-won wisdom," the complaint said.
Critics have said that could violate a constitutional clause barring accepting gifts from foreign governments.
A hardship clause, its members say, will effectively let too many "dangerous" foreigners stay on.
The case concerns the so-called "dual sovereignty" exception to the Constitution's Double Jeopardy clause.
They rejected a clause, however, that transfers power over military appointments to the new government.
The non-disparagement clause isn't the only example of aggressive image control from the company.
Richard Blumenthal, sued Trump in June 2017, accusing him of violating the Foreign Emoluments Clause.
Tesla has since updated the terms and conditions to remove perpetually from the likeness clause.
It quietly eliminated a clause in its contracts today that critics have called anti-competitive.
"It's still improper and, from my point of view, a violation of the emoluments clause."
Mr Castro's daughter Mariela, who leads the national sex-education agency, asked for this clause.
" The court rejected the challengers' argument that Ohio's system violates the "Failure-to-Vote Clause.
The Justice Department's lawsuit accuses California of violating the Supremacy Clause of the US Constitution.
The second has a subordinate clause — with an unfamiliar, unnecessary name — stuffed into the middle.
Here, the "subordinate" clause runs on for 66 words; the main point takes seven words.
" He compared himself to George Washington and branded the emoluments clause of the Constitution "phony.
The program contains a trigger clause, which would unwind the program if TELUS Communications Inc.
The foreign emoluments clause offers a shield against that corruption — assuming that it is enforced.
It's a compromise from the five-year sunset clause that the Trump administration originally proposed.
I noted earlier that the Supreme Court has hardly ever examined the Take Care Clause.
The clause in force today gives the legislature much wider discretion than the original one.
There are rumors that Beyonce has a cheating clause in her agreement with Jay-Z.
While going over the contract, something about the abortion clause didn't sit well with Kelley.
Some capital markets experts are sceptical about whether a nationalisation clause would make much difference.
The AFA would have to pay a buyout clause to trigger Sampaoli's release from Sevilla.
That's the clause of the agreement that pledges the members of NATO to mutual defense.
Our argument is that it violates the free exercise of religion clause of the constitution.
It's really hard to get standing to sue under the Appointments Clause of the Constitution.
The EBA declined to comment on whether its lease had a specific Brexit break clause.
A controversial clause in the trilateral pact put the focus back on the Sino-U.
United States, which struck down stringent Arizona immigration laws as preempted under the Supremacy Clause.
Some capital markets experts are skeptical about whether a nationalization clause would make much difference.
In the docs, obtained by TMZ, Alicia and Chris have agreed on a "cohabitation" clause.
It also ditches a clause reserving sanctions for those with "command responsibility" for malign acts.
"This clause should be struck out," then German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer told the Convention.
One clause in the deals, sources said, will prevent either side from suing the other.
Perhaps you'd suffer professional consequences, or perhaps you had to sign a non-disparagement clause.
The assault weapons ban had a built-in sunset clause, and it expired in 2004.
The arbitration clause doesn't apply to the "cybersecurity incident," according to Equifax's frequently asked questions.
UK ATTORNEY GENERAL ABANDONS TIME-LIMIT AND UNILATERAL EXIT CLAUSE FOR IRISH BACKSTOP- THE TELEGRAPH
The "Commons Clause" is the part that places commercial restrictions on top of the license.
This means "he's finding ways that things don't violate the Establishment Clause," according to Feldman.
There will also be a grandfathering clause protecting investors from policy changes by future governments.
United States, a case about the double jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment, on Wednesday.
But the Excessive Fines Clause is ripe for consideration in the age of mass incarceration.
The country has not yet invoked the legal clause that starts negotiations for its withdrawal.
Natsuo Yamaguchi, Komeito's leader, for one, has warned against tampering with the constitution's pacifist clause.
There will also be a grandfathering clause protecting investors from policy changes by future governments.
United States (1972), Booker's actions were clearly covered by the Constitution's Speech or Debate Clause.
The waiver clause can be broadly applied to many issues, not just accusations of discrimination.
Then there is a clause in Viacom's bylaws that tries to take this right away.
Unprotected by an arbitration clause, companies can face litigation that could result in huge settlements.
Mr. Trump is fighting claims that he violated the Constitution's emoluments clause barring self-enrichment.
According to the Supreme Court, the legislature's actions violated the Free and Equal Elections Clause.
Miller argues that Mueller's appointment was in violation of the Appointments Clause of the Constitution.
The Free Speech Clause protects the right to express beliefs and opinions, including religious ones.
The Free Exercise Clause protects living your life according to the teachings of your faith.
In most cases, you can just transpose the preposition to the beginning of the clause.
That clause requires congressional approval of any gifts received by the president from foreign governments.
What that means is that the Emoluments Clause could become a dead letter post-Trump.
This latest round of legal maneuvers hinges on the arbitration clause in Ms. Carlson's contract.
The clause forbids the government from prosecuting someone more than once for the same crime.
The Supreme Court has never squarely considered the clause and there are no historical analogies.
Federal authority is clear here — the Equal Protection Clause is practically calling for this legislation.
The Federal Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act was upheld in 2007 under the Commerce Clause.
Have a meeting with him and tell him, you&aposre unconstitutional under the appointments clause.
And the company could in theory invoke the material adverse change clause in its agreement.
U.S. negotiators have proposed adding a "sunset clause" to the North American Free Trade Agreement.
The owners suggest the clause might end up denying them access to their front doors.
The Terms of Service of Wikimedia Foundation have a specific clause against undeclared paid advocacy.
But her final acceptance speech, for Album of the Year, contained one particularly cryptic clause.
He said the refined coal industry successfully pushed to have the market value clause eliminated.
They want an extended producer responsibility clause in waste management legislation in parliament next month.
They have argued that the break clause would allow more favorable terms to be reached.
"If it was a narrowly drafted clause, it would not trouble the agency," he said.
They should back clean athletes not a doping culture with an easy let-in clause.
Judge Sullivan said that he would decide later whether Mr. Trump violated the Constitution's clause.
" That clause permits Congress to "regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states.
Irish voters were also asked to decide whether to remove a constitutional clause banning blasphemy.
It's overlooked in favor of the second clause, about the right of people to firearms.
However, the three syntacticians made a plausible case that Pirahã does have this clause stacking.
But a few parts remain unincorporated — including, until Wednesday, the Eighth Amendment's excessive fines clause.
Or could such measures violate, say, the Constitution's Equal Protection Clause or the First Amendment?
The clause calls for an investigation should any board director be accused of sexual harassment.
"Today's decision thus overthrows the court's long-settled view of the takings clause," she wrote.
The clause permitted a team to opt out if its conference required 22 contracted games.
His operation is tax-exempt, under a clause designed to help religious and charitable groups.
The company added that it did not believe the war exemption clause fit the circumstances.
It preserves the exit clause allowing the I.R.S. to terminate the program for any reason.
What is the proper legal remedy for Mr. Trump's repeated violations of the Emoluments Clause?
The current agreement runs through 2021 but has an opt-out clause after this season.
But the Supreme Court has never squarely addressed the status of the excessive fines clause.
He also described Article 5, the collective defence clause of the NATO Charter, as inviolable.
The court itself has agreed that some partisan gerrymanders could violate the Equal Protection Clause.
That clause is there because Chinese Navy submarines had already come calling to Sri Lanka.
He may never live down his first mistake, that no-trade clause, the original sin.
The notion of 'responsibility' is enshrined in the Second Amendment's 'a well regulated militia' clause.
Smith remains good law when a state is accused of violating the free exercise clause.
The clause bars federal officeholders from from receiving gifts or benefits from foreign governments.  Sen.
"I believe this guideline should become law, and also include a penalty clause," Ibusuki said.
In reality, it is a happiness clause: If Messi is unhappy, then he can walk.
She was delving deeply into the history of the excessive fines clause of the Constitution.
Gore ruling or the Emoluments Clause in an hour discussion with Senator Charles E. Schumer.
James has also said she would investigate whether the president has violated the Emoluments Clause.
" Scalia explained that the "Appointments Clause is, intentionally and self-evidently, a limitation on Congress.
"The one thing you can't do under the establishment clause is denomination favoritism," he said.
She intends to introduce a "conscience clause" allowing delegates to vote for whomever they wish.
"That's even more reason for me to keep that no-Trump supporters clause in there."
But as is often the case with Mr. Stone, there may be an escape clause.
The majority's view of the Constitution's free-exercise clause poses a threat to civil society.
Davis waived his no-trade clause so the deal with the Lakers could be completed.
After "multiple conversations and iterations" with Soona&aposs lawyers, the candor clause came into being.
The Emoluments Clause of the Constitution prohibits U.S. officials from receiving payments from foreign governments.
For years he included a clause in the Interior Department's appropriations bill barring the change.
"The Little Shell is not the last legitimate tribe to be recognized," Mr. Clause said.
" So they crafted a clause empowering Congress to impeach a president "for treason, or bribery.
He wants to add a clause to the charter's Article 9 to legitimize the military.
Indeed, the rules were rewritten to remove that clause following Ken Starr's Clinton-era probe.
It can also impede due process and presents a host of Equal Protection Clause concerns.
The current deal runs through 2021, but there is an opt-out clause after 2019.
But Trump warned that he may disregard the common defense clause if allies keep underspending.
Justice Thomas's narrower construction of the Commerce Clause is more aligned with its original meaning.
He doesn't say the important thing and then leave you with a long dependent clause.
The Clause does, however, acknowledge Congress's prerogative to pass certain laws "incidental" to regulating commerce.
The bill included a clause, Mr. Bozdag said, precluding rape, violence or coercion from pardon.
The Constitution's Emoluments Clause bars the president from earning any compensation from a foreign government.
But Anthony has that pesky no-trade clause in his contract, putting him in control.
Washington also wants a clause that would allow any member to withdraw after five years.
All could fall under the "protected concerted activity" clause in the National Labor Relations Act.
Brie Larson during The Santa Clause 2 Premiere at El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood, California.
Amtrak spokesperson Kimberly Woods said the clause was added to resolve customer claims more efficiently.
His benefitting from leasing this US property violates the domestic emoluments clause of US Const.
The decency clause was rescinded from that grant and the school could proceed without interference.
There are legal strategies to address this, including an in terrorem, or no-contest, clause.
Trump hasn't offered a new constitutional doctrine or argued for stretching the "take care" clause.

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