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"It is in accord with the recommendations of merchant law."
"Such things are prescribed by merchant law," he said.
"It is also contrary to the laws of most cities," I said, "and to merchant law, as well."
Merchant Law Group has major involvement in the residential school lawsuits.
Further, according to Merchant Law, the rescuer has no obligation to free the girl.
Goods and services flowed freely during the medieval merchant law, thus generating more wealth for all involved.
The new Merchant Law encompasses a huge body of international commercial law.
The medieval, the modern and cyberspace merchant laws face comparable issues of enforceability.
It is here that Merchant Law is drafted and stabilized.
The thighs and the lower left abdomen are the brand sites recommended by Merchant Law.
His work chains, however, were politically neutral, understood under merchant law as hirable instruments.
Out of the Slave Wars grew much of the merchant law pertaining to slaves.
All lawsuits were filed by Merchant Law Group.
Merchant law declined as a cosmopolitan and international system of merchant justice towards the end of medieval times.
Merchant law has been unsuccessful, as yet, in introducing such things as patents and copyrights on Gor.
"Merchant law?"
The fairs incidentally are governed by Merchant Law and supported by booth rents and taxes levied on the items exchanged.
Lex mercatoria (from the Latin for "merchant law") is the body of commercial law used by merchants throughout Europe during the medieval period.
In the eighteenth century, English merchant law was still based on the Lex mercatoria, a medieval series of customs and principles used to regulate trading.
The origin of the name may stand for Lex Mercatoria a Latin expression meaning literally "merchant law".
Various cities, through their own Merchant Law, legislated and revised, and upheld, at the Sardar Fairs.
He mentions Anglo-Saxon customary law, church law, guild law, and merchant law as examples of polycentric law.
Yet perhaps this is not so puzzling, for the Gorean cities will, within their own walls, enforce the Merchant Law when pertinent, even against their own citizens.
The Weight and the Stone, incidentally, are standardized throughout the Gorean cities by Merchant Law, the only common body of law existing among the cities.
Technically, according to Merchant Law, which serves as the arbiter in such intermunicipal matters, the girls become briefly the property of their rescuers, else how could they be freed?
As nationalism grew in the 18th and 19th centuries, the Law Merchant was incorporated into countries' local law under new civil codes.
The Law Merchant, a precursor to modern commercial law, emphasised the freedom to contract and alienability of property.
W Mitchell, The Early History of the Law Merchant (Cambridge, 1904)
This development is an event of the first magnitude, which is comparable to the incorporation of the law merchant into the common law in the eighteenth century.
Lord Mansfield, Lord Chief Justice in the mid-eighteenth century, began the merging of law merchant and common law principles.
A Europe-wide Law Merchant was formed so that merchants could trade with common standards of practice rather than with the many splintered facets of local laws.
In their model, merchants query the Law Merchant to determine whether a potential trading partner has cheated on prior contracts, triggering the application of punishment by other merchants.
Founding fathers, most notably, Alexander Hamilton and John Adams, were familiar with leading international law treatises, the law merchant, and English constitutional law.
C Gross and H Hall (eds), Selden Society, Select Cases on the Law Merchant (1908-32)
On the other hand, however, by the law merchant, which is part of the law of England, and which disregards the rules of common law, bills of exchange were freely assignable.
They knew also a Law Merchant which was different from the Common Law and had an international character, a law founded on the commercial customs of merchants and seafaring men of all nations.
Giuseppe Lorenzo Maria Casaregi (1670-1737) was an Italian jurist whose research on promissory notes, insurance, endorsement and sea trade law influenced the European evolution of the Law Merchant.
The modern origins of marine insurance law in English law were in the law merchant, with the establishment in England in 1601 of a specialized chamber of assurance separate from the other Courts.
In England, it was taught academically at Oxford and Cambridge, but underlay only probate and matrimonial law insofar as both were inherited from canon law, and maritime law, adapted from the law merchant through the Bordeaux trade.
In addition, by the 10th century, the Law Merchant, first founded on Scandinavian trade customs, then solidified by the Hanseatic League, took shape so that merchants could trade using familiar standards, rather than the many splintered types of local law.
Milgrom and his co-authors argued that this model sheds light on the development of the Law Merchant, an institution of late medieval trade in Europe, whereby merchants looked to the judgments of the Law Merchant to decide what counted as "cheating."
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