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They also have their own civil and judicial codes.
It was adopted as an amendment to the judicial code of conduct and took effect the next day.
As a judge, she is prohibited by judicial code of conduct to join her husband in partisan campaign events.
State judicial codes contain recommended support payments on incomes of up to $120,000, so Brown's salary is off the chart.
They had no written rule of law and judicial code, while strong customary practices and justice system existed in their societies.
And it said that in commenting publicly on the case, the judge had shown bias and violated the judicial code of conduct.
Working . . . Access to sealed data is denied without proper authority or judicial code.
Still, if Sun had committed a crime, then David would be violating China's judicial code in discussing these affairs with the assistant secretary.
This is a judicial code based on Roman law and composed by a group of legal scholars chosen by Alfonso himself.
Applies vacancy provisions of the Federal judicial code with respect to the office of the Attorney General.
A review body has determined that Judge Broadbelt's activities violate the judicial code of conduct; he has appealed to the high court.
Urukagina, king of Lagash, creates the first known judicial code (24th century BC)
Like "Red Corner," it devotes considerable attention to the courtroom manners and unforgiving judicial code in an Asian country.
Judicial codes of conducts in the various states generally incorporate some form of provision that judges should avoid even the appearance of impropriety.
But he said that the university's judicial code had no role for the president and that he had been limited to urging a quick resolution of the case.
White was restrained from campaigning on her own behalf by the judicial code of ethics, but her opponents "flooded the state" with materials urging her defeat.
Matigan-i Hazar Datistan (Judicial code)
It sharpens our awareness of specific cases and reminds us that, while all democracies have a right to defend themselves, they must also operate within an accepted judicial code."
Slowly, feudal systems were imposed, such as the 1515 Tripartitum of István Verboczy, and later with other judicial codes, such as the Habsburg one.
A court action may also sometimes be homologated by a judicial authority before it can proceed, and the term has a precise legal meaning in the judicial codes of some countries.
"It violates every right given to us in the judicial code," said the president of the junior class, Gail Zuckerman, whose repeal petition was endorsed last week by the student government.
There is, after all, another punishment in our judicial code which is only slightly different from capital punishment and which is far more terrible than twenty-five years forced labour.'
Legal experts say that such exchanges violate the judicial code of conduct, and under some interpretations could warrant charges of witness tampering, a criminal offense that carries a 10-year sentence.
In 1899, Congress appointed a commission to recommend revisions in the judicial code, and the subsequent report became the basis of the proposed revision submitted to Congress in March 1910.
She should challenge the federal judicial code of conduct, imposed by the Judicial Conference, a 27-member group of senior judges that administers the federal courts, by agreeing to televise the trial.