Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

424 Sentences With "sue for"

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

In the same way that a man could sue for the theft of a horse, he could sue for the theft of a wife.
I've been married to Sue for more than 20 years.
We need to know that we can sue for discrimination.
It's by no means clear what Trump could sue for.
If it holds firm, you could potentially sue for access.
I tried to sue for divorce and he stabbed me.
A couple of the deceased players' widows sue for compensation.
Sullivan, which constrains public officials' ability to sue for defamation.
The presumed intent was to make the Taliban sue for peace.
Photographers can also sue for loss of profit and legal fees.
And can Sheeran sue for such a gross misrepresentation of character?
That prompted the Trump Organization to sue for breach of contract.
Xi is now working with the ACLU to sue for damages.
The board there has been harassing Sue for maybe 10 years.
You don't listen to 'A Boy Named Sue' for the ending.
Today's vote helps Democrats go to court to sue for this information.
Too much time may have passed to sue for the original incident.
He can sue for money if he wants, but that's kinda lame.
I didn't hire a lawyer and try to sue for big bucks.
Your neighbor could sue for damages and press criminal charges for vandalism.
Saudi Arabia's allies must press it to sue for peace in Yemen.
Markets reeled, and a Mexican delegation rushed to Washington to sue for peace.
Workers can sue for twice however much they are paid below that wage.
But the buyer might sue for the money back, dragging out the process.
But few observers expect them to sue for peace or lay down their arms.
As part of their divorce, my mother agreed never to sue for child support.
Rather than sue for divorce, Canada is trying to widen its circle of friends.
Deschamps understandably took issue with Cantona's comments and has threatened to sue for defamation.
Mercedes filed the federal lawsuit after the artists threatened to sue for copyright infringement.
For starters, the Hill's headline "American Samoa residents sue for citizenship" is not accurate.
After the attack was reported, thousands of Interpark customers threatened to sue for damages.
When Christians cite the Bible to defend child molestation, Jesus should sue for defamation.
In 1940, Finland was not "in Russian hands," but it did sue for peace.
Brown's lawyer told BBC that his client is innocent, and plans to sue for defamation.
Others have raised the possibility that Gionet could sue for being called a white supremacist.
Either way, she may be about to sue for some or all of Nootka Sound.
I mean, anybody can sue, you can sue for anything, but they have no basis.
You can't sue for the kind of negligence that is most common in environmental suits.
You don't need to biggest, baddest military to force your aggressor to sue for peace.
You know parents: the slightest whiff of discrimination, and they sue for damages with interest.
Those who sue for defamation in the United States, however, must prove allegations are false.
By that logic, nobody could sue for damages once the crime being committed was complete.
He resolved to sue for damages to his reputation as a resident of the province.
If you were to sue for noise violations, you would probably go home empty-handed.
Also: Let injured veterans sue for malpractice; fertility preservation treatments; the joy of cursive writing.
As president, Harris vows to make it easier for people to sue for climate damages.
And he thought that after such a defeat the Arabs would have to sue for peace.
Sunde has decided to sue for defamation against the labels, claiming they've sullied his good name.
He vowed to sue for slander two women whose rape accusations prompted a preliminary judicial inquiry.
"It is regrettable that some states have decided to sue for environmental claims now," she said.
And that will be left, Sue, for you and your colleagues or for Jacopo to write.
If you do not get your security deposit back, sue for it in small-claims court.
Justices will weigh a big question: Can consumers sue for damages in these kinds of cases?
Sometimes, it can be a loophole for men's rights activists to sue for discrimination against men.
And if the landlord holds your security deposit, you could sue for the deposit as well.
Sue for trade peace, Mr Trump—and watch the yuan and the euro rally against the dollar.■
Foley denies the allegations and said he has hired lawyers to sue for defamation over the claims.
Existing media law can sometimes come into play, and alleged victims can sue for slander or defamation.
But the company lost and the drivers got another chance to sue for millions in back pay.
"I could sue for damages, or we will try to reach some sort of agreement," he said.
It allows individuals to sue for declaratory or injunctive relief, and when not acting collectively, for damages.
The current law generally requires that defamed individuals must be alive to sue for libel or slander.
Trump encouraged Kavanaugh, whose appointment cemented the Supreme Court's 5-4 conservative majority, to sue for libel.
"As a lawyer, I would sue for everything," said Steven R. Wagner, a Manhattan real estate lawyer.
The bill will not give military members the right to sue for damages like their civilian counterparts.
He tried to sue for one, but without a lawyer, he has been unable win his release.
She co-sponsored the Lilly Ledbetter Act, which allows women to sue for equal pay for equal work.
Political twists in Berlin, not crushing defeat on the battlefield, pushed Germany to sue for peace in 1918.
Trump and family settled, without admitting guilt, but only after Trump tried to counter-sue for $6900 million.
Former Enron employees are unlikely to sue for copyright infringement if their correspondence is used for AI research.
It settled with them, handing control of the company to new management, leading Fujifilm to sue for damages.
Typically, patients like Tamesha have a right to sue for medical malpractice and seek compensation for their injuries.
Meanwhile, the Taliban has not publicly sought a political deal, and they are unlikely to sue for peace.
Burrows decides to sue for medical malpractice and turns his personal video diary into this sobering investigative documentary.
Their family members can also use the military hospitals, but they can sue for malpractice if they wish.
The dispute settlement changes make it harder for investors to sue for damages over actions by member governments.
The amounts you can sue for, and the rules governing small claims court, vary from state to state.
Samantha's mother, who submitted the paperwork to sue for support, has a few priors, including a prostitution charge.
Palmer said in a media release last month that he intended to sue for A$1.2 billion ($887 million).
Shedd asked: If Trump said no foreigners could stay at his hotel, how quickly would Maryland sue for discrimination?
Vanderzanden repeatedly reported the harassment until Facebook finally shut down the veteran's profile, prompting Kolfage to sue for defamation.
Since Bivens, the court has generally been loth to expand the right to sue for violations of constitutional rights.
If it were possible to sue for presidential malpractice, this would be low-hanging fruit for the legal community.
Since nations aren't doing enough, plaintiffs will tend to sue for action by the oil, gas, and coal companies.
Breyer again focused on precedent, and on the eight cases where providers were able to sue for their patients.
The magazine claimed since he cultivates an image of a hard-drinking party boy he can't sue for defamation.
A federal appeals court decided this year that Mr. Taylor could not sue for damages, but one judge dissented.
Earlier this year, state hospital worker William Neely was forced to sue for the right to resign union membership.
The law contains what&aposs known as the Privacy Act, which allows people to sue for invasion of privacy.
Highlights from the "updated" comment thread include alleged family members vowing to sue for the return of their money.
They're making it harder for people to sue for discrimination, which affects all people with disabilities, including psychiatric disabilities.
Typically, patients who sue for medical malpractice or product liability must turn over their own medical records as proof.
But in the eyes of the law, they'd still be convicted murderers and unable to sue for wrongful imprisonment.
We can't sue for damages because of that but it was hardly what we went to school looking for.
When Tammy threatened to file for a divorce and sue for the land, Eugene had a heated confrontation with her.
House Bill 228 would expand the ability of individuals or groups impacted by local firearm regulation to sue for damages.
Lozoya called the allegations "absolutely false" in a Twitter post on Sunday, and he has threatened to sue for defamation.
This case, said Black, will determine whether it's also something for which you can sue for damages in civil court.
This is an opt-in process, and those who don't join retain their right to sue for copyright infringement instead.
At issue is who can sue for alleged discrimination, and whether irresponsible loans can be blamed for broader economic damage.
The report states Walgreens executives feared Theranos would sue for breach of contract if it pulled out of the deal.
Mexican lawmakers could pass a law making it harder for public officials and other public figures to sue for libel.
Plaintiffs can sue for both compensatory damages and punitive damages; in one case, the lovelorn husband was awarded $8.8 million.
In a statement, a lawyer for Mr. Glasser, Eve Wagner, said that Mr. Glasser planned to sue for wrongful termination.
In prerevolutionary Paris, where Virginia's laws did not automatically apply, she would have been able to sue for her freedom.
It gives multinational companies rights to sue for compensation when local regulations damage their profits, tripping concerns about national sovereignty.
In January 1991, US troops attacked Iraqi forces, pushing Saddam out of Kuwait and forcing him to sue for peace.
The justices will ultimately decide a broader question: Can consumers even sue for damages in an antitrust case like this one?
A thin hope, established by a case in Massachusetts in 1818, allowed a jilted woman to sue for breach of promise.
That could make it even more difficult for trans people to access health care, gender-appropriate bathrooms, or sue for discrimination.
Already, Palestinian advocates complain of a double standard: Jews can sue for complete restitution of their pre-13 East Jerusalem properties.
Michigan's Republican-controlled legislature passed a law in December that closed a loophole that allowed patients to sue for higher damages.
But that came only after she agreed to sign a settlement agreement and promised not to sue for over the situation.
If you are hurt by a car or a prescription drug, after all, you are typically allowed to sue for damages.
The E.E.O.C. can sue for damages on behalf of complainants, though Ms. Smith said she thought it unlikely in this case.
If the seller said that work was done properly when it wasn't, then you may be able to sue for misrepresentation.
It has limited liability for corporate fraud and made it harder for workers to successfully sue for age and gender discrimination.
That comes a year after UPS rival acquired TNT, and the decision may provide the opportunity for UPS to sue for damages.
Individuals in Illinois who believe their rights under BIPA, the nation's strongest biometrics privacy law, have been violated can sue for damages.
But Tywin Lannister was put in a weaker position, unable now to sue for peace with the North and the Baratheon brothers.
Village of Bellwood (1979), he accepted Miami's contention that cities are, under certain circumstances, eligible to sue for damages under the FHA.
Merger appraisal had become appealing to arbitrageurs, who would buy shares of takeover targets, vote against any deal and sue for appraisal.
Lawyers for a group of UK residents whose Facebook data was harvested by Cambridge Analytica are now threatening to sue for damages.
He also called for a separate bill to reinstate individuals' right to sue for discrimination, which were also gutted by the bill.
I want to thank the BBC and Mel and Sue for making my time in the tent great fun and really rewarding.
Sullivan, made it harder for public officials to sue for defamation and remains a bedrock legal principle upholding freedom of the press.
In such a scheme Israel is forced to sue for peace on the international community's terms, which, incidentally, are decidedly anti-Israel.
In terms of legal action, he said the most likely outcome is that relatives of the victims will sue for civil compensation.
Portnoy doubled down and said he would not only fire employees who hired the attorney, but sue for damages and back wages.
But the general negligence statute was four years and had not expired, allowing her to sue for Mr. Grissom's pain and suffering.
In the process, a provision allowing citizens to sue for violations was removed, leaving the state attorney general as the sole enforcer.
As for buyers, scorned ones might sue for damages or for "specific performance," a legal remedy that could force sellers to close.
He also vowed to press the legislature to pass a law to "reinstate the right to sue for discrimination" in the state's courts.
The Gropius-designed metal door handles became the prototype that Germany essentially adopted en masse (Gropius tried, unsuccessfully, to sue for copyright infringement).
After a few chapters in Vivian's company, grown-ups will not just pray for her safety but also want to sue for custody.
" • The president also repeated a pledge to make it easier for people to sue for defamation, denouncing U.S. libel laws as a "sham.
Trump has also allowed US citizens to sue for restitution of property seized by the communist government when it took power in 1959.
This is one of two key legal prerequisites for being able to sue for sexual harassment, the other being a hostile work environment.
As well as rebutting the allegations in the forum where they are raised, he can complain to the police or sue for defamation.
Is it evil to sue for constitutional affirmation of civil rights like Free Speech in carrying out the duties of an elected official?
The initial version of Humphrey-Hawkins allowing workers to sue for a job reminds us of the need for a strong enforcement mechanism.
The Blaze said in a statement on Friday that Ms. Lahren was still employed and questioned how she could sue for wrongful termination.
If states or cities find companies liable for taxes later, they could sue for years of back taxes, several tax experts told Recode.
In New Jersey, in rules that seem to favor buyers, a wronged seller cannot keep the deposit, but instead must sue for damages.
Mr. Obama on Friday also renewed his call for Congress to pass a measure allowing women to sue for punitive damages for pay discrimination.
Commercial lessors often do, too, and they may have the ability to sue for the remaining term of the lease if things go south.
A ruling in favor of the county would limit the ability of environmental groups to sue for Clean Water Act violations in certain cases.
The fervor around this theory has reached a fever pitch this week because Tomlinson has decided to sue for joint custody of the infant.
A decision in favor of the county would limit the ability of environmental groups to sue for Clean Water Act violations in certain cases.
The state connived to persuade these destitute young mothers to accept small workers' compensation checks and give up their right to sue for damages.
Other justices worried that a ruling for Miami would allow all sorts of people and entities to sue for indirect harm from discriminatory practices.
Optimists, eyes on the polls, hope that Mr. Trump, in losing, will discredit these views and that Republicans next year will sue for peace.
Spokeo responded that Congress did not have the power to create a legal right to sue for plaintiffs who have suffered no concrete harm.
Former Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe is looking to sue for defamation, wrongful termination and other possible civil claims, his lawyer told reporters Friday.
"The bar to sue for libel and defamation in Hong Kong is very low, which is totally the opposite from the US," Cheng said.
Mr. Moonves has the right to challenge the board's decision in a confidential arbitration proceeding, and he could also sue for breach of contract.
Supporters say it helps combat "patent trolls," or companies that obtain patents not to use them but to demand royalties and sue for damages.
And some privacy advocates said the bill did not go as far as the ballot initiative in allowing individuals to sue for not complying.
The Act vastly restricts the rights of prisoners to sue for relief, and deprives the courts of jurisdiction of hearing most alleged-abuse cases.
Yet, there is one hashtag that seems to be cropping up more and more often on social media in recent months: #Sue for "Suicidal".
So if a buyer breaks a promise not to resell a toner cartridge, Lexmark can sue for breaking the contract, but not for patent infringement.
She insisted I sue for sole custody, which meant there was no chance my husband and I could settle our divorce agreement out of court.
Nonetheless, facing opposition from the auto and trucking industries and from every government with a say, Mr Moroun might decide to sue for peace instead.
It is regrettable that some states have decided to sue for environmental claims now, notwithstanding their prior support of this ongoing federal-state collaborative process.
We don't make it harder for all landowners to sue for trespass simply because one curmudgeon frightens children who walk too closely to his lawn.
The 1964 ruling puts the onus on public figures to show that statements about them were made with malice in order to sue for defamation.
As a self-employed writer, completely dependent on the internet, I thought maybe I should sue for loss of work, 10 lattes and emotional distress.
That tension played out within the lead characters' relationship, but also amazingly in Kahiru's decision to sue for the film to be shown in Kenya.
But even if the Trump administration doesn't sue for new talks, the end of the INF Treaty probably won't make that much of a difference.
In 1964, the Supreme Court severely restricted the ability of public officials to sue for defamation, ruling in the landmark case New York Times v.
PETA argued that non-humans like Naruto, a Sulawesi crested macaque, are authors under the Copyright Act, and therefore they can sue for copyright infringement.
In 2013, the Minnesota Legislature opened a three-year window in the statute of limitations that allowed alleged victims of prior abuse to sue for damages.
The parallels to real life are so obvious I don't even need to state them (if Duncan isn't a Mary Sue for Clinton, he's darn close).
Sometimes victims' families sue for the release of footage recorded by police equipment because they suspect it will reveal that officers used unjustified and excessive force.
The suit was eventually tossed but an appeals court last year restored it, ruling that Edwards could sue for gender discrimination, the  New York Post reported .
According to The Blast, promoters Damon Feldman, Samantha Goldberg and their attorney, Tony List, are threatening to sue for millions if she bails on the event.
The 1986 Computer Fraud and Abuse Act made it a crime to intentionally access a computer without authorization, and also allowed victims to sue for damages.
But he noted that German law was changed last year to allow claimants to sue for three years after the facts of a case become known.
It did agree to eliminate another form of enforcement between the United States and Canada, which allows investors to sue for relief from foreign countries' actions.
He called on the Indonesian government to replace criminal defamation laws with a civil law that allows people with defamation complaints to sue for monetary damages.
If the offensive goes according to the Saudis' and Emiratis' plan, promptly after that, the Houthis, who also control the capital Sana, will sue for peace.
It would also ban wage secrecy, increase penalties for employers who retaliate against workers who share salary information, and allow workers to sue for pay discrimination.
For his part, Conor has previously said Chiesa should NOT be able to sue for intentional infliction of emotional distress because he wasn't the intended target.
Hughson settles cases for amounts he's often required not to disclose, but, in theory, the TCPA allows consumers to sue for as much as $1,823 per violation.
The bill would also ban wage secrecy, increase penalties for employers who retaliate against workers who share salary information, and allow workers to sue for pay discrimination.
It would ban salary secrecy, increase penalties for employers who retaliate against workers who share wage information and allow workers to sue for damages of pay discrimination.
We sent back another legal document and his counter response was to sue for 700,0003 pesos worth of tips, unpaid holidays, even for days he hadn't worked.
To successfully sue for trademark infringement, she said, a company has to demonstrate that people confuse the cardboard replicas with real Gucci products, which is highly unlikely.
The BNSF case involves a pair of lawsuits brought under the Federal Employers' Liability Act, which permits injured railroad employees to sue for compensation from their companies.
That was made official on Thursday, with the announcement by Tribune that it was ending its merger agreement with Sinclair and would sue for breach of contract.
The guarantor of a loan cannot sue for discrimination as a loan "applicant" under the federal Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA), a federal appeals court has ruled.
Many Syria intervention plans want to make the rebels strong enough either to outright defeat Assad or to threaten him enough to make him sue for peace.
And the CRFA still leaves room for business-owners to sue for defamation in cases where a customer, or even a rival, posts false negative reviews online.
If the apartment has already been sold to a third party, you might be able to sue for damages known as loss of bargain, Mr. Wagner said.
The president, in a Sunday tweet, suggested the justice should sue for libel, and that the allegations were an attempt to influence his decisions from the bench.
Supreme Court precedent says only "direct purchasers" can sue for antitrust damages, and Apple claims that iOS users actually buy apps from developers, not from Apple itself.
The Times, for instance, had argued that Palin couldn't sue for defamation because the article did not refer to her personally, but rather her affiliated political action committee.
And despite the KKK saying it would sue for libel, the coverage reportedly led to as many as hundreds of thousands of new members for the hate group.
The basic question in the case is whether Congress may give individuals the right to sue for damages in federal court when a federal law has been violated.
In fact, he isn't the first big shot to try to make it easier to sue for defamation after having a SLAPP suit blow up in his face.
The Puerto Rican government is bracing for the possibility that Whitefish would sue for breach of contract if the cancellation is approved, according to sources familiar with discussions.
Fake news in the 2016 election gets at least seven pages; the macaque who took a selfie and then saw PETA sue for his copyright gets just two.
And by trying to sue for peace in the culture war, Northam is succeeding only in convincing both sides that he doesn't understand how high the stakes are.
Kaila Hail-Stern, The Mary Sue For those of us who are fans of the MCU, Infinity War is a sprawling culmination of 10 years of build-up.
Instead, it has been invoked time and again to deny active-duty members of the military a right extended to nearly every other American — to sue for injuries.
If civilian contractors had done the cleanup and later discovered declassified documents that show the government failed to follow its own safety plan, they could sue for negligence.
Pelosi authorized the Judiciary Committee to go to court to sue for documents and testimony as part of an "impeachment investigation" based on the Mueller findings as well.
When the First Amendment was ratified, he wrote, many states made it quite easy to sue for libel in civil actions and to prosecute libel as a crime.
The case involves two lawsuits against BNSF brought under the Federal Employers' Liability Act, a U.S. law that allows injured railroad employees to sue for compensation from their companies.
They also hope it propels lawmakers to change Pennsylvania law to give prosecutors more time to pursue charges against child predators and victims more time to sue for damages.
In the decades before the Civil War, mixed-race slaves would sometimes sue for their freedom, claiming that they were not actually black, and thus could not be enslaved.
When asked by Lauer why he didn't fight back against his accusers and sue for defamation, O'Reilly said those kind of lawsuits were difficult for public figures to win.
Plus, an employee could sue for discrimination if, for example, you manage out someone who is over 40 and rehire a younger employee to fill that exact same role.
"If the woman was raped by someone else, the man can sue for an injunction or damages (against the doctor)," Case University law professor Jessie Hill told BuzzFeed News.
He was trying to bend people to his will — convince them to sue for peace while at the same time making it feel like the idea was their own.
The best that can be hoped for is keeping the Taliban from power, and bolstering government forces to the point the Taliban can be persuaded to sue for peace.
After all, robots don't call in sick, don't steal from their employers, don't sue for workman's compensation, and they never complain about long hours or the heat or the cold.
An artist or songwriter can also send a 'cease and desist' letter or even sue for false advertising if they believe their music appears to be supporting a particular candidate.
"It said on the contract: Anything goes and you can't sue for defamation of character — because you wanted to be on the show, and wanted to be famous," she said.
All the allegations but Constand's were too old to be the subject of criminal prosecution, which prompted the seven women to sue for defamation when Cosby accused them of lying.
In that case, the court held that a violation of one's Fourth Amendment rights by federal officers can give rise, in certain situations, to a right to sue for damages.
Another involves whether the family of a Mexican teenager shot dead while standing on Mexican soil by a U.S. Border Patrol agent in Texas can sue for civil rights violations.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo on Monday signed a sweeping bill that will make it easier for workers in the state to sue for sexual harassment and win their cases.
Had Germany gotten the bomb first, the Allies most likely would have had to sue for peace rather than risk the Hiroshima and Nagasaki-like destruction of many Western cities.
My hunch is that their publication was delayed for 20 years after Judd's death because some objects of his negative notice are now dead and thus cannot sue for libel.
California recently passed a privacy law, which goes into effect in 2020, allowing consumers in the event of a data breach to sue for up to $750 for each violation.
The hard-fought victory persuaded Westmoreland to adopt a strategy of attrition — if American troops killed enough North Vietnamese and Viet Cong, the enemy would have to sue for peace.
In addition, public figures who sue for libel in the United States must prove that the publisher acted with reckless disregard of the truth, even if the statements prove false.
The A.C.A., also known as Obamacare, does not allow workers to sue for punitive damages or compensation for emotional and physical harm after being denied space or time to pump.
Even when victims want to sue for the symbolic value, hoping to expose their abusers, they have trouble finding lawyers who will take cases with little promise of monetary compensation.
As a result, state officials fear that these unregulated associations could put unsuspecting parishioners at risk, especially since most faith-based organizations do not allow members to sue for nonpayment.
Foreign currency loans total 124 billion zloty ($13 billion), almost one third of all Polish mortgages, and Wednesday's court verdict is expected to encourage more borrowers to sue for refunds.
As its threat capabilities grow rapidly, Pyongyang will sue for a disingenuous peace agreement with the U.S. under the guise of living in constant fear of a preemptive U.S. strike.
READ: Trump's Now Arguing He Doesn't Have the Time to Be Investigated in Any Criminal Case Meanwhile, House Democrats are threatening to sue for more details about the whistleblower's complaint.
Publishing houses recently passed on his memoir, actors disavowed working with him, and Amazon canceled a four-picture distribution deal, which prompted Allen to sue for at least $68 million.
If Rossello refuses to implement parts of the plan, the board could sue for enforcement, putting yet another piece of the embattled island's financial future in the hands of a judge.
A former UPS Supply Chain Solutions Inc operations supervisor cannot sue for wrongful termination for possessing a concealed handgun on the company's property, a divided federal appeals court ruled on Thursday.
At issue is whether foreign sales restrict a patent owner's ability to sue for infringement if a buyer sells those products back in the United States, sometimes at a lower price.
Kavanaugh's logic would make it nearly impossible for women who work in congressional offices to sue for sexual harassment, on the grounds that they may reveal confidential information about legislative acts.
You can imagine where this is going to go, that noncitizens are going to be able to sue for denial of, I don&apost know, asylee status, refugee status, H1B visa.
If 140,000 international and 350,000 Afghan forces could not force the Taliban to sue for peace in 85033, certainly a more modest 15,000 international forces will not do so in 2017.
When the court ruled on the case in 2017, the justices did not determine whether Hernandez's family could sue for a violation of the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unjustified deadly force.
GREENS TO SUE FOR BUTTERFLY PROTECTIONS: Two environmental groups filed formal notice Tuesday that they will sue federal officials to try to force Endangered Species Act protections for the monarch butterfly.
The agreement allows for Vivint, in the case of a willful breach, to sue for the full benefits of the transaction, which in this case are well over a billion dollars.
If you are told that your property has lost value because of the fence and a city inspector gives your neighbor a ticket, you may be able to sue for damages.
She also objected to guidelines on pregnancy discrimination released by the commission in 2014, and regulations published the following year that made it easier for workers to sue for age discrimination.
Read generously, though, Mr. Trump's statement may have meant that he intended to appoint Supreme Court justices who would vote to overturn precedents that make it hard to sue for libel.
That day, March 16, 2018, his lawyers in London were finally serving SCL with a formal legal claim, requesting disclosure of his data and laying out their intention to sue for damages.
According to Chahal, his legal options for cancelling the trademark are narrow: because the original trademark was issued more than five years ago, Clivillés will likely have to sue for trademark infringement.
In general I like to refrain from predicting how judges will rule, but I feel pretty safe saying that the 9th Circuit will not allow a monkey to sue for copyright infringement.
The law also grants consumers a private right to sue for the greater of $500 or the actual monetary loss in damages, and treble (triple) damages for each willful or knowing violation.
Wall Street scored a big victory when the Senate scotched a proposed law that would have allowed customers of banks and credit-card companies to sue for malpractice through class-action lawsuits.
A decision by a panel of judges from the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in San Francisco, allowed the mother to sue for violating her son's constitutional rights.
Tighter rules on Cuba: The Trump administration has imposed new restrictions on dealing with the island, including limiting nonfamily travel and allowing exiles to sue for property seized by the Castro government.
European laws do not generally provide for fines as hefty as those that Volkswagen paid in the United States, and it is difficult for car owners in Europe to sue for damages.
For many plaintiffs, a benefit of suing for defamation is the opportunity to air the facts of what happened years ago, even if they are unable to sue for harassment or assault.
Clinton and Mr. Trump are offering the same mantras that their fellow politicians have delivered for years: Outsourcing is unavoidable, sue for trade and currency violations, repeal TPP, re-negotiate NAFTA, etc.
You may also consider sending the landlord a letter from a lawyer pointing out that you could sue for creating a private nuisance, which could help bring this issue to a head.
Even though Mr. Trump loudly calls for making it easier to sue for libel, it's hard to think of anyone who has maliciously accused more people of more things with less proof.
"We are so grateful to John and Sue for their contribution to the Mead, and for sharing key works from their collection with us," said David E. Little, Mead director and chief curator.
The archdiocese filed for bankruptcy in 2015, two years after the Minnesota Legislature opened a three-year window that allowed people who had been sexually abused in the past to sue for damages.
"Because Wikimedia has self-censored its speech and sometimes forgone electronic communications in response to Upstream surveillance, it also has standing to sue for a violation of the 1st Amendment," the judges found.
But inmost cases, the damages a consumer could sue for is just the difference in cost between the $100 price they paid for a Kobe steak and the $10 steak it really was.
Pay discrimination and equal pay Senator Sessions and Representative Price also voted against the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, which extended the statute of limitations to allow women to sue for pay discrimination.
Uber won a similar case in September when a federal appeals court judge ruled that Uber drivers could not sue for employment status and had to instead take their claims to private arbitrators.
The hope was the victory would be substantial enough to force the Houthis to sue for peace and give the Saudi- and Emirati-backed Yemeni factions a stronger role in future political negotiations.
Equal pay and paid sick leave: Democrats passed a law requiring equal pay for women, minority, and LGBTQ employees who do "substantially similar work" to other employees — and allowing them to sue for discrimination.
Apple had argued that consumers didn't have the standing to sue because Apple was merely providing a marketplace for the apps — in Apple's argument, only the app developers had standing to sue for antitrust.
Charlemagne's ruminations on the 100th anniversary of the armistice concluded that it was "political twists in Berlin, not crushing defeat on the battlefield" that pushed Germany to sue for peace in 1918 (November 10th).
What I am learning here is just how abandoned Syria's vast population that is against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad feels and how much international pressure there is on them to sue for peace.
Catch up quick: The Trump administration also plans to roll out policy so U.S. citizens can sue for land seized by the government after the Cuban Revolution in 1959, reports the Los Angeles Times.
The big picture: It's rare for the government to sue for drug patent infringement, although the Department of Health and Human Services has patented more than 2,500 products since 1976, WashPost reported last month.
CREW co-chair Painter agreed that the judge overseeing the case, U.S. District Judge Ronnie Abrams of Manhattan, will have to decide whether anyone has a private right to sue for Emoluments Clause violations.
Following the Trump administration's announcement in the summer that it intends to weaken an Obama-era vehicle emissions standard, state officials said they plan to sue for their right to implement more stringent regulations.
Then, last year, the Supreme Court ruled that an employee could sue for pregnancy discrimination if an employer refused to make accommodations for her, but makes them for other workers who have similar limitations.
Even with the pending deadline, however, some firms are waiting to see how aggressively the law is enforced — under the measure, consumers can sue for $750 per violation — or whether further guidance is provided.
While Gersh isn't the first person to sue for online harassment, hers is the first lawsuit to go after someone for inciting a troll storm, in which an individual purposefully mobilizes an online mob.
The appeals court, however, said the drivers could not be forced to arbitrate claims brought under a unique California law that allows plaintiffs to sue for labor law violations on behalf of the state.
While courts award multimillion-dollar judgments for negligence in hospitals, states treat companion animals as a form of property, and owners have little opportunity to sue for damages beyond the cost of a replacement.
Now, he's looking to make the officers and the City of NY pay -- and while he hasn't said a specific number, he previously filed docs allowing him to sue for up to $50 million.
But in most cases, the damages a consumer could sue for is just the difference in cost between the $100 price they paid for a Kobe steak and the $10 steak it really was.
That law changed the Civil Rights Act so that workers could sue for fair compensation up to 180 days after receiving a discriminatory paycheck from their employers — rather than when the salary decision was made.
Pearl has received a huge reward, while actual LGBTQ Americans struggle to sue for discrimination in the 28 states that lack non-discrimination laws protecting LGBT people from being unfairly treated based on sexual orientation.
A U.S. appeals court on Friday said plaintiffs who sue for workplace discrimination under federal law are only required to show that they first filed administrative complaints when employers raise the issue as a defense.
The legislation calls for granting foreign nationals protections that U.S. nationals enjoy under the 1974 Privacy Act — notably, the right to sue for intentional misuse of their personal information contained in U.S. law enforcement records.
Revenge porn perpetrators are good at exploiting loopholesBecause of the lack of clear revenge porn legislation, Chambers wasn't able to press criminal charges, but she was able to sue for the copyright of the videos.
Earlier this year, Indiana lawmakers considered legislation that would allow revenge porn victims to sue for damages, but a committee chair has so far made sure to foil any bills that criminalize revenge porn outright.
Securities and Exchange Commission, decided last June, the Supreme Court limited to five years the period in which the S.E.C. could sue for the return of ill-gotten gains under the applicable statute of limitation.
Fearing that ISIS might step into any emerging power vacuum, and concerned about further losses to its control and its cadres of fighters and supporters, the Taliban (or most of it) might sue for peace.
" The lawyers demanded BuzzFeed News "terminate any further investigation of Mr. Robbins" and threatened to sue for "significant damages," including in the United Kingdom or Ireland, where "the defamation law will be much more favorable.
Today, the law authorizes the government to sue for the item sought to be forfeited, known as an "in rem" proceeding, because it was used for a crime or represents the proceeds of illegal conduct.
The case "looks like the last gasp of the firm's litigious approach to US actions, and if it is to survive ... the firm will have to sue for lenient treatment from the Commerce Department," said Triolo.
But he's having some fun with the lawsuit first, based on his preliminary ruling: A monkey, an animal-rights organization, and a primatologist walk into federal court to sue for infringement of the monkey's claimed copyright.
The bill allows for individuals to sue for declaratory or injunctive relief or damages if they're not acting collectively, but for collective private civil actions, states can appoint nonprofits to pursue damages on behalf of constituents.
According to Bobby and Rose Powers, the couple who make Bloody Hell Hot Sauce in the family kitchen, Aykroyd has threatened to sue for trademark infringement if they don't destroy all of their current inventory. Why?
The man who had bought it in Jordan tried to sue for its recovery, but the ADCA and the IAA (which governs archaeology in Israel proper) conspired to confuse the issue of who possesses the panel.
It does offend me that organizations like DreamKEEPERS would much rather hand out awards to the rich, the respectable, and the politically connected than black activists who march in the streets and sue for our humanity.
"While Gersh isn't the first person to sue for online harassment, hers is the first lawsuit to go after someone for inciting a troll storm, in which an individual purposefully mobilizes an online mob," Vice reports.
President Donald Trump responded to the lawsuit in a pair of tweets, calling the action "good news" for his Republicans insofar as it provides an opening to counter-sue for more information about the opposing party.
"If the man raped his wife, he can sue for an injunction to prevent her from getting an abortion," Hill explained, adding that the husband will not be allowed to receive any money from the lawsuit.
The organization has weaponized the state's Freedom of Information Law to "request," and sue for, financial documents from two hundred and fifty villages, towns, and cities in Orange, Westchester, Putnam, and other counties in New York.
Despite the massacre and the army's campaign of repression against the Kurds, Mr. Talabani and Mr. Barzani's son Massoud, who by then had taken over leadership of the K.D.P., traveled to Baghdad to sue for peace.
According to Bloomberg's Sarah Frier, use of contract labor for moderation may be in part because of the legal risk full-time employees would bring if they were able to sue for psychological trauma on the job.
Plaintiffs often travel to a jurisdiction like Great Britain, where the statement was "published," sue for defamation there, win under that jurisdiction's plaintiff-friendly laws -- and then return to US courts to enforce their judgment obtained abroad.
In particular, the public objected to provisions that would give U.S. investors the right to sue for loss of profits resulting from any laws to raise social or environmental standards put into place by the European government.
IN 1857, Roger B. Taney, chief justice of the United States, wrote that Dred Scott, an enslaved man living in Missouri, had no standing to sue for freedom, on the grounds that blacks could not be citizens.
Copyright owners must have a copyright registration from the U.S. Copyright Office, not merely an application pending, before they can sue for infringement, a unanimous U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Monday, resolving a long-standing circuit split.
More than two years after the Supreme Court cleared the way for same-sex marriage nationwide, plaintiffs want the justices to enable employees to use existing civil rights law to sue for discrimination based on sexual orientation.
The attorney general, Letitia A. James, said the city must provide financial relief to the debt-ridden taxi medallion owners within 30 days or she would sue for fraud, unlawful profit and other violations of state law.
Calvert, the author of 2000's "Voyeur Nation: Media, Privacy, and Peering in Modern Culture," said that Brzezinski could potentially sue for defamation for the "facelift" remark, but questioned what she could claim as damages from that.
Scott's trust is a shareholder of Johnson & Johnson, yet the trust is suing to force J&J to allow it to propose a mandatory arbitration provision to cut off all shareholders' rights to sue for securities law violations.
But the dismissal briefs show, if nothing else, that the pension funds, which own a combined 10 millions shares of J&J, deserve to be heard in a critical test of their right to sue for securities violations.
Smartt and Boubede were not officially named as suspects at the time and are both now dead, but according to Gamberg, Smartt was angry at Sheila Sharp's mother, Sue, for siding with Smartt's wife in a marital dispute.
Nimrod "Rod" Chapel Jr., president of the NAACP's Missouri State Conference, says he decided to issue the advisory after the state's Legislature passed a law in June making it more difficult to sue for housing or job discrimination.
But unlike Trump, Obama already had two major legislative achievements under his belt at this point in his presidency: an $800 billion economic stimulus package and a law making it easier for women to sue for equal pay.
The court previously ruled in the same case in 2017, but did not decide the important legal question of whether Hernandez's family could sue for a violation of the U.S. Constitution's Fourth Amendment, which bars unjustified deadly force.
A nuclear weapon could be brought into the campaign as a result of perceived failure in a conventional campaign, potential loss of control or regime, or to escalate the conflict to sue for peace on more-favorable terms.
His team has, instead, moved quickly on issues like reversing an Obama-era rule to protect servers from having their tips stolen and making it harder for consumers victimized by their credit card company to sue for redress.
Another key element of the reported agreement was ownership advancing the players $170 million over the next two months, with the players vowing not to sue for their full salaries in case the season is completely wiped out.
If it has a selective distribution system that prohibits retailers selling outside its network, the brand could sue for breach of contract, says Julia Dickenson, a senior associate at law firm Baker McKenzie, who works with luxury brands.
The legal issue before the justices was whether a plaintiff had the legal standing to sue for a technical violation of a federal consumer law even when there is a question about whether the person has been directly harmed.
State lawmakers on Friday addressed one point of controversy over House Bill 2 by restoring the right to sue for wrongful termination in state court on allegations of discrimination based on age, sex, race or other factors, officials said.
FROM PEN: Viola Davis Opens Up About Her Parents and Her Impoverished Childhood Later, Annalise receives a call from Bonnie, who says Hannah Keating is going to protest Annalise's ownership of the house and sue for the insurance money.
Macron struck a tough tone in response, saying he would punish excessive use of force by police if proven true, but dismissed some of the allegations as "lies" and said the government would sue for slander any unfounded claim.
But as he counts up the conflicts at the city, county, state, and federal levels—the disciples have given notice that they may sue for violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and civil rights acts—he phrases his expectations differently.
Just last year, the Lovings were the subject of a critically acclaimed film named after them, which depicted their relationship and how they came to find help from the ACLU to sue for the right to marry each other.
In the initial court filing, lawyers for MoMA said that the cafe was "targeting the very visitors that frequent MoMA's museum, stores and restaurants," suggesting that the shop was even hoping that MoMA would sue for the free publicity.
It took aim at telemarketers that used automated dialing systems, typically to place calls or send faxes to randomly generated numbers, and allowed the recipients of such calls to sue for hefty statutory damages of as much as $1500.
There are new rules on where and how to hold meetings, legal changes that make it easier to sue for sexual harassment and different ways to report when something goes wrong — all efforts to make Hollywood a bit safer.
The federal state's bodies, including police forces, purchased Volkswagen vehicles that were equipped with a device to rig diesel emissions tests and the paper quoted a state finance ministry spokeswoman as saying it was its "budgetary duty" to sue for damages.
With support for the International Monetary Fund, the introduction of so-called Collective Action Clauses in most sovereign debt sales now makes it harder for creditors to hold out against a debt restructuring, limiting their leverage to sue for better terms.
The second involves any internationally sold cartridge that was refilled and imported into the US. In the first case, Lexmark argued that its contract with buyers includes a right to sue for patent infringement, which last year's federal court decision upheld.
Three years later, the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud, a group composed of insurance companies, consumer groups, and other stakeholders, helped craft model legislation that guaranteed companies broad immunity from any customer who wished to sue for being wrongly accused of fraud.
On March 4, 2019, in Fourth Estate, the Supreme Court ruled that California federal courts and others following the application approach were wrong, and that a plaintiff cannot sue for copyright infringement unless the Copyright Office has issued a copyright registration.
LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The world's top 90 fossil fuel producers, including Chevron and ExxonMobil, have caused half of global temperature increases since 1880, researchers said, potentially enabling people who have been harmed by climate change to sue for damages.
But the Phillies said the defendants, who are from Brooklyn, have threatened to end its use next June, making the Phanatic a "free agent," and sue for copyright infringement unless the team renegotiated the 1984 agreement and paid millions of dollars.
Upton also said the 7th Circuit, in the country's heartland, is a good court to hear what he believes is the first en banc argument on whether Title VII gives gays and lesbians the right to sue for workplace discrimination.
Conservatives including Justice Clarence Thomas and the late Antonin Scalia, have argued that Medicaid is a contract between states and the federal government, and that the law doesn't give individuals the right to sue for the entitlements the statute requires.
This man is worrying about getting socks to the troops in Virginia as much as he's worried about how in the hell is he going to avoid impeachment hearings in 2100, as to whether he should sue for a negotiated peace.
At first, the children of Elías García wanted to sue her for destroying their father's painting — sue for what, one wonders; Cecilia didn't have any money, and it's unclear whether the painting could have been restored — but they eventually let off.
When it calls up an investment manager to complain about performance, or to dump that manager, or when it calls a lawyer to sue for fraud, that catches the attention of corporate managers, of hedge funds, of private equity funds.
And so my legislation would have put some real teeth into the enforcement mechanism by allowing individuals whose privacy is ignored or violated, or whose wishes are not honored, to be able to sue for those breaches of their privacy.
The decision held that Dred Scott, an enslaved man who had lived for a time in a free state and territory, had no standing to sue for freedom on the grounds that blacks could not be citizens of the United States.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump rejected Democrats' calls for impeaching Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh on Sunday after a new report involving sexual misconduct allegations, encouraging Kavanaugh to sue for libel and suggesting the Justice Department could "rescue" him.
The 2 men who were featured in "Leaving Neverland" who accused Michael Jackson of molesting them as children have just won a huge legal victory ... because a California appeals court has just given them the right to sue for sexual abuse.
She's undergone countless surgeries, transplants, and donations to help save her sick sister, but when doctors discover that Anna is now a match to be Kate's bone marrow donor, Anna decides to sue for the right to control her own body.
It also places a duty of loyalty on large technology companies, preventing them from using data to harm their customers; empowers state legislatures and state attorneys general; and gives individuals the right to sue for privacy violations that cause them harm.
You could also sue for damages if the neighbors' actions damaged or killed a tree — even if they never set foot on your property, said Ingrid C. Manevitz, a partner at the Manhattan law firm Schwartz Sladkus Reich Greenberg Atlas.
The couple decides to sue for a violation of their privacy, but the nature of the subject matter was such that the episode didn't air for over a decade, and only after "Married... With Children's" run on TV had ended.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Conservative Justice Clarence Thomas on Tuesday urged the U.S. Supreme Court to reconsider its landmark 1964 ruling that made it harder for public figures to sue for defamation, a precedent that has served as powerful protection for the news media.
The Center for Biological Diversity said in a statement on Sunday it had sent Hilcorp a 60-day notice of its intent to sue for the gas leak, and is monitoring the oil leak to determine whether additional legal action is warranted.
Read more: Couple describes the horror of learning a stranger gave birth to their baby boy in a fertility clinic mix-up, forcing them to sue for custody of their childAround the time the case was settled, Kim moved to New Jersey.
While the state violations are often small — the Illinois act gives citizens the right to sue for up to $5,000 per violation — potential liability can run to billions or even trillions of dollars once multiplied across hundreds of millions of individual users.
Even if the law were changed to allow the estate of a deceased person to sue for defamation, the reality is that it would be difficult to win because the key witness, which is the defamed individual, could not take the stand.
Whereas, online, the whole idea that someone should be "innocent until proven guilty" goes out the window: The named accused often find their jobs lost, relationships destroyed, and reputations tarnished quicker than they can write a statement defending themselves, or sue for defamation.
He will likely sue for peace with Daenerys (who is, unbeknownst to both, his aunt) in an attempt to turn her attentions from the siege of King's Landing to the defense of the Wall, leaving the other Starks in charge of Winterfell.
What about the draconian immigration policies that are tearing children from the arms of their mothers, and the recent regulations Trump is passing that make it harder for nursing home residents — 70 percent of whom are elderly women — to sue for mistreatment?
An employment tribunal had previously decided that Mr. Smith had not been an employee of Pimlico Plumbers — meaning that he was not entitled to sue for unfair dismissal — but was a worker there, which meant that he could pursue his other complaints.
If someone turns another person's selfie into revenge porn by posting it online, the person who took the selfie can sue for breach of copyright, and possibly have a greater chance of a successful outcome than they might by pursuing a criminal case.
The U.S. Supreme Court has called for additional briefing in a case that is likely to determine whether federal workers who sue for age discrimination must prove that bias was the sole cause of an employment decision, and not just one factor.
A federal appeals court on Friday revived a mechanic's job discrimination lawsuit against an Oklahoma trucking company, ruling that he could sue for "quid pro quo" sexual harassment even though his Equal Employment Opportunity Commission charging form did not make that specific accusation.
While the U.S. military must plan to win an offensive war anywhere in the world, China only has to defend its East Asian interests well enough to force the United States to preemptively back down or sue for peace in any future conflict.
The unprecedented action was made possible following a move by the Trump administration to fully implement Title III of the Helms-Burton Act, also known as the Libertad Act, which allows US nationals to sue for damages over private property seized during the Cuban revolution.
For the rest of the year, they got to work on their appeal, but by the beginning of 2018, they say Pepperdine was threatening to sue for damages and court costs, and it became an instance of If you drop yours, I'll drop mine.
Denson's lawyers argue the campaign's standard NDA is unlawful because it penalizes employees for exercising their right to sue for things like workplace discrimination and harassment, unpaid wages, and violations of workplace safety laws, and for claiming violations of campaign finance laws, corruption, or fraud.
The states' claim to injury, let alone the kind of injury that gives them standing to sue for nonenforcement of the immigration laws is even more tenuous than the long-ago claim of the environmentalists, thrown out of court by Justice Scalia's Lujan decision.
The nine-member court's conservative justices seemed hostile to the notion that former Paterson police detective Jeffrey Heffernan could sue for a violation of his right to freedom of association under the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment when he did not actually exercise those rights.
A 'Jim Crow Bill' Rod Chapel Jr., Missouri NAACP State Conference president, said Senate Bill 22015 -- a new state law making it more difficult to sue for housing or employment discrimination -- coupled with a long history of civil rights violations and discrimination forced the action.
Moreover, Benchmark alleges that Kalanick pledged in writing -- as part of his resignation agreement -- that the two empty board seats would be independent and subject to approval by the entire board (something Benchmark says was the reason it didn't sue for fraud at the time).
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has been quieter than usual on Twitter for the past day — maybe because he's too busy emailing a former employee he called out for "sabotage" and proceeded to sue for stealing trade secrets and data about the electric car company.
A California law that permits workers to sue for labor law violations on behalf of the state allows plaintiffs to seek penalties not only for alleged violations that affected them, but also for claims that impacted other workers, a state appellate court has ruled.
The same organisation, arguing that Oregon law permits victims of violence to sue for redress, filed suit for damages on behalf of an eight-year-old racehorse, Justice, who had been found severely frostbitten and malnourished and whose owner had been convicted of neglect.
So it was gasp-inducing when we learn that April served Jackson with a restraining order after overhearing Mama Avery was going to get him to sue for full custody of their baby, while Jackson gave her a crib with a "let's not fight" note.
"Allowing American citizens to sue for stolen property in Cuba and denying foreign nationals involved in trafficking stolen property entry into the United States is a huge step toward cutting off the money supply to the Castro regime," Senator Rick Scott said in a statement.
McFadden sounded skeptical that Democrats can still sue for the president's filings after the McGahn decision but said he was open to hearing arguments the case should still be allowed to proceed by instead emphasizing the statute allowing Neal access to Trump's returns upon demand.
And that change could also give companies like Murray Energy a legal justification to sue for its deletion entirely, while giving the E.P.A. the legal basis to craft weaker pollution regulations that no longer take into account the co-benefits of eliminating additional pollutants.
Recently, Clive Hamilton, a professor of public ethics in Australia, said that his publisher delayed the release of a book of his that investigates the rising influence of the Chinese Communist Party in Australia for fear that the Chinese government may sue for defamation.
But while other measures lacked the same urgency or drama, lawmakers did approve scores of bills in recent days, like a provision that would make it easier for cancer patients to sue for malpractice, and a ban on e-cigarettes in bars and restaurants.
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday placed tight limits on where patent lawsuits may be filed — a unanimous decision that was a blow to so-called patent trolls, or companies that buy patents not to use them but to demand royalties and sue for damages.
Justice Anthony Kennedy cast a critical vote with the liberal wing of the Court in a 2015 case on the question of whether individuals have the right to sue for proper enforcement of federal programs when the government has fallen down on the job.
"The fact that the ACLU and its partners would go to court to specifically sue for the right for aliens to enter the country illegally is demonstrative of the open border community's disdain for our nation's laws that almost all rational Americans find appalling," the statement read.
Thermographic video cameras not only produce images that would make Andy Warhol proud (or at least sue for infringement), but the tool allows researchers to assess physiological changes — and potentially emotional states — in a wide variety of species like distantly related BFFs Canis familiaris and Homo sapiens.
Judge Kaufman's decision expanded the principle of universal jurisdiction by ruling that foreign victims of torture that occurred abroad can sue for civil redress in the United States when the defendant — in this case Mr. Peña-Irala, then of Brooklyn — is within the dominion of American courts.
If the courts find there was no unlawful behavior by any of the companies or public bodies involved, victims will not be entitled to sue for compensation and would only get the financial support and temporary housing already provided by the government and public donations, personal injury lawyers said.
However, a group of parliamentarians and lawyers on Monday wrote to the UK government's legal representative in Scotland on Tuesday advising them that they will after seven days sue for a "court guarantee" which could rule any plan to suspend parliament in order to force through Brexit, illegal.
Shareholder Bluebell Partners has informed the bank it wants to sue for damages directors, auditors and the director general who approved the financial accounts for the years 210, 210 and 210 and the six-month earnings through June 2300, the bank said in a document published on its website.
Celebrities and public figures like Kim Kardashian can force a takedown through rights of publicity, which protect their likeness from misuse, but often the most the average person can do is sue for defamation, under civil laws that apply, such as intentional infliction of emotional distress and defamation.
The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday granted en banc review and vacated an April panel decision that said HR workers may sue for retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act 1964 even when they are fired for going outside of company protocols for handling discrimination claims.
"They trying to shut him down," the rapper posted on Instagram of Love & Lust owner Imran Jairam, who has put the NYPD on notice of his intent to sue for $125 million over his claim that Gonzalez unfairly targeted his club for inspections in order to squeeze him for perks.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has become the third federal appeals court to rule that workers who sue for retaliation under the federal wage-and-hour law may recoup emotional damages, and ordered a new trial on damages in an overtime pay case against a property management firm.
Civil rights and child welfare advocates said that any move by the government to eliminate education and recreation would constitute a violation of the Flores settlement, which in 1997 established the standards for treating migrant children held in government facilities, and would prompt them to sue for reinstatement of the activities.
The Trump administration on Wednesday imposed new restrictions on dealing with Cuba amid a broader toughening of its Latin American policy, limiting nonfamily travel to the island and how much money Cuban-Americans can send to relatives there, and allowing exiles to sue for property seized by the Castro government.
Seasons: 1 (2015-2016)What it was about: "Good Girls Revolt" is set at a magazine in 1969, just as the women's movement was taking off in the US. A group of hard-working female researchers sue for equal employment rights, claiming the magazine only allowed men to become reporters.
Bernie Sanders has overhauled his New Hampshire operations as his campaign fights to maintain support there (NY Times) Trump rejected Democrats' calls for impeaching Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh after a new report involving sexual misconduct allegations, encouraging Kavanaugh to sue for libel and suggesting the Justice Department could "rescue" him.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara Moses during a hearing in the case agreed with the three former partners who filed the lawsuit that the emails could help resolve the key issue of whether they were employees of Chadbourne, and thus able to sue for sex discrimination, their lawyers at Sanford Heisler Sharp said.
He also points out that Foxconn has waived its right to consequential damages, but the state has not waived its rights to them — meaning the state could sue for benefits it would have received if Foxconn had done what it said it would, though what exactly those are would be more difficult to prove.
This panel disagreed, but said it was bound by the precedent of Cetacean until the case was overruled by a higher court — implicitly calling for a higher court (like a Ninth Circuit en banc panel or the Supreme Court) to go back and make it much harder for PETA to sue for animal rights.
In a letter to U.S. District Judge Denise Cote in Manhattan on Friday, AlphaCap's attorney Marie McCrary of Gutride Safier said the company had given Gust a covenant not to sue for infringement on the three patents at issue in the litigation and asked Gust to agree to drop its effort to invalidate the patents.
Absent malice in intentionally publishing a story a news organization knows to be untrue, American law makes it very difficult to libel public figures, but the new verdict from the federal court in Florida set a precedent that even household names can successfully sue for "an unreasonable invasion of privacy," a nebulous and dangerous new standard.
The likeness of Jose Antonio Elena Rodríguez hangs next to a makeshift memorial where he was fatally shot by a US Border Patrol agent near the US–Mexico border A federal appeals court ruled Tuesday that the mother of a Mexican teenager killed in a cross-border shooting by a US Border Patrol agent can sue for damages.
If she lives in one of the eight states that have extended discrimination protections to domestic workers — Oregon, California, Connecticut, Illinois, New York, Massachusetts, Hawaii, and Nevada — she can file a claim with the state agency that enforces civil rights laws, or she can go ahead and sue for discrimination in state court (the process varies by state).
Congress swiftly passed a law making it easier for women to sue for damages in harassment cases, and the 1992 elections saw 24 women elected to Congress and four to the Senate -- including the first-ever black woman senator, Carol Moseley-Braun, one of several freshman lawmakers who cited the Hill hearings as their inspiration for running.
"We came to understand that there are a lot of people out there — colleagues and friends and like-minded folks in the commercial sector and really just the man on the street at tech companies — that are really bothered" by the abuse of patents by companies that obtain them to demand royalties and sue for damages.
The upshot, according to the 3rd Circuit (and similarly-minded federal trial courts in Los Angeles and Manhattan): Whistleblowers who claim they're entitled to Dodd-Frank's enhanced procedural and back pay provisions can be forced into arbitration, even though Dodd-Frank itself protects the right to sue for whistleblowers with claims under the less generous Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
Under the Act, if a drug company does not provide samples of the drug or agree to share its REMS program within 31 days and 121 days, respectively, then the generic may sue for injunctive relief plus a monetary award of no more than the drug company's revenues for the drug in question during the period of noncompliance.
The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, in a June report accompanying its version of the legislation, asserted that neither existing toxic chemical law nor any revisions pending in Congress should be seen as a way to "pre-empt, displace or supplant" the right to sue for damages in lawsuits like the ones filed against Monsanto.
And they continue to face intense bias in the courts, where they are vulnerable to Rule 609 evidence if they decide to sue for any reason — say, over a work-related injury, as in the case of a 1989 Supreme Court ruling that solidified Rule 609's place in the justice system, or a police shooting.
Barack Obama signed 39 bills during the period, including an $800 billion stimulus program to confront an economic disaster, legislation to make it easier for women to sue for equal pay, a bill to give the Food and Drug Administration the authority to regulate tobacco and an expansion of the federal health insurance program for children.
The former employee, Amanda Schmitt — the plaintiff in the case — did not sue for workplace sexual misconduct because the statute of limitations had run out; instead, she brought a retaliation claim against Mr. Landesman that alleged he had cornered her at a restaurant in May 2017 and assailed her in front of others for having accused him of harassment.
North Korea has yet to get rid of its nukes, China to cement a new trade deal, Iran to forswear terrorism, Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro to step down, US troops to depart Afghanistan, the Taliban to sue for peace, Saudi Arabia to come clean about journalist Jamal Khashoggi's brutal murder, and the Middle East to catch even a whiff of a peace plan.
" For more than four decades, the Supreme Court's so-called Bivens doctrine has allowed injured parties to sue for damages when their rights under the Fourth Amendment have been violated, recognizing that "damages have been regarded as the ordinary remedy for an invasion of personal interests in liberty," and that for victims of police misconduct, "it is damages or nothing.
"My fight for sight: Why Star reporter Nick will never wear contact lenses again," Read more: Couple describes the horror of learning a stranger gave birth to their baby boy in a fertility clinic mix-up, forcing them to sue for custody of their childAK is an eye infection caused by an amoeba found in water that targets the cornea.
The former mayor would also order his Environmental Protection Agency to do more to investigate, and litigate, environmental civil rights complaints; and he would pressure Congress to create new laws making it easier for private citizens to sue for discrimination without being under the aegis of a federal agency (as they currently must be in order to pursue a lawsuit).
The justices did not comment in denying the petition for certiorari filed by Sedona-based DRK Photo, which claimed that the November ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had misinterpreted the Copyright Act of 1976 and widened a split in the federal appellate courts by holding that DRK could not sue for infringement of copyrights that it did not own.
This provides a way for the people of the Tribal Areas to become full legal citizens, to elect their own representatives directly, to have the laws of Pakistan apply to them, to sue for justice in Pakistani courts and to be compensated for the destruction of their homes in the war on terrorism — all rights that they do not have now.
"When I'm the president, we'll take [gun manufacturers] on, remove the immunity and allow those parents who are trying now to sue for the pain and mayhem they have caused," Biden said at a county Democratic Party dinner less than a mile from the site of the deadliest shooting by a lone gunman in U.S. history in 85033, The Associated Press reported.
Current law only prohibits employers from denying pregnant women the same accommodations they already give to workers with disabilities, but many women who sue for pregnancy bias have trouble identifying nonpregnant workers to compare themselves to, Dina Bakst, the copresident of women's rights group A Better Balance, said during a hearing of the House Committee on Education and Labor's Subcommittee on Civil Rights and Human Services.
The BBC points out that it's hard to really see any grounds for a lawsuit — the EU and UK haven't struck a final deal on Brexit yet, and the UK can't exactly sue for a breach of an agreement that doesn't exist: The UK and the EU have not reached a Brexit agreement yet, so there can be no action for breach of that agreement.
To get the 5G speeds, though, you'll have to sign up for either Unlimited Elite or Unlimited Extra plan (current users of these plans will get 5G access for no extra cost when it launches.) It's important to note that this is real 5G we're talking about, not AT&T's 5GE which is essentially a rebrand of the company's 4G LTE Advanced, prompting Sprint to sue for false advertising.
Read more:YouTuber David Dobrik gave a homeless man a car and free Chipotle burritos for a yearAn Australian billionaire and politician is demanding $500,000 from a YouTube creator and threatening to sue for calling him a 'dense Humpty Dumpty'A YouTuber who filmed himself visiting the 7 Wonders of the World in 7 days told us how he did itHow much YouTube pays creators for 100,000, 1 million, and 4 millions views
A top senator just introduced a bill to require equal pay for the US women's soccer team before the 2026 World CupNational team women's soccer players sue for equal payUSWNT claims study by US Soccer that the women have been paid more than the men is nothing but a 'ruse''We won't accept anything less than equal pay': US Women's Soccer team speaks out after mediation talks quickly break down
Before he was President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE's personal lawyer, Michael Cohen worked as a personal injury lawyer reportedly covering clients who allegedly staged car accidents in order to sue for large sums of money.
At their conference on Friday, the justices will consider petitions for certiorari asking them to reverse federal appeals courts decisions that said a U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) employee and an offshore oil rig worker, both of whom are black, could not sue for race discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 because they did not allege they were fired, demoted, or paid less than coworkers of other races.
As Vox's Alexia Fernández Campbell writes, Kavanaugh's argument in the Howard case would also likely limit congressional workers from moving forward with many claims of sexual harassment — because sharing their allegations could be too much of a threat to sensitive legislative business: Kavanaugh's logic would make it nearly impossible for women who work in congressional offices to sue for sexual harassment, on the grounds that they may reveal confidential information about legislative acts.

No results under this filter, show 424 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.