Search for: "ADOPTION OF GEORGIA & another" Results 621 - 640 of 1,379
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
8 Nov 2017, 8:01 am by Altman & Altman
Some states – including  Georgia, Nevada, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Virginia – have recently adopted tougher laws and enforcement to keep people out of the left lane, unless they are passing. [read post]
2 Nov 2017, 4:20 am by Sasha Volokh
Another reason is that states differ in whether they classify public employee pensions as contracts at all. [read post]
24 Oct 2017, 5:30 am by Colby Pastre
State Adoption of Sales Taxes In 1930, Mississippi became the first state to adopt a general sales tax.[2] In the decade that followed, 23 other states followed suit (see map below) as the Great Depression disrupted state and local economies. [read post]
23 Oct 2017, 4:22 pm by Kevin LaCroix
  Additionally, insurers should anticipate the potential for coverage of future settlements of D&O cases involving cybersecurity issues in light of more rigorous regulatory standards that companies are expected to adopt. [read post]
23 Oct 2017, 4:22 pm by Kevin LaCroix
  Additionally, insurers should anticipate the potential for coverage of future settlements of D&O cases involving cybersecurity issues in light of more rigorous regulatory standards that companies are expected to adopt. [read post]
23 Oct 2017, 6:37 am by Colby Pastre
However, the city’s top rate is in Platte County, at 8.475 percent, while another part of the city lies in Clay County, where it is subject to a total rate of 8.1 percent. [read post]
17 Oct 2017, 2:45 am by Dan Carvajal
Maine Maine adopted, and then repealed, a 3 percent surcharge on high earners in 2017, which would have resulted in a top marginal individual income tax rate of 10.15 percent, eclipsed only by California& [read post]
16 Oct 2017, 4:10 pm by Eugene Volokh
Since issuing our decisions in Day (1879) and Calhoun (1916), the people of Georgia have adopted three new constitutions (1945, 1976, and 1983). [read post]
3 Oct 2017, 9:30 pm by Leah Wong
University of Georgia School of Law Professor Sandra Mayson discusses machine bias during her lecture. [read post]
3 Oct 2017, 1:15 pm by Eugene Volokh
” As a result, the Emory Community — a category that includes faculty, students, staff, and others — has at least the same rights as the communities of the University of Georgia or Georgia State University. [read post]
2 Oct 2017, 4:50 pm by Kevin LaCroix
 Though a bit of a leap, there are actually a few SEC enforcement actions that have already applied (though not truly tested) the SEC’s adoption of its new outsider trading canon. [read post]
25 Sep 2017, 9:01 pm by Joanna L. Grossman
E.L., the Court held that Alabama could not refuse full faith and credit to a lesbian co-parent adoption from Georgia, under the exacting form of full faith and credit granted to judicial decrees. [read post]
20 Sep 2017, 5:03 am by Ben
The law was adopted after a second reading at the bimonthly session of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress. [read post]
1 Sep 2017, 9:02 am by admin
They view public property as yet another opportunity to build private fences and charge admission, not as our common heritage to be shared equally and non-consumptively by all. [read post]
  A legislative body’s failure to adopt a law could mean any number of things—including two things that are diametrically opposed. [read post]
25 Jul 2017, 6:00 am by Colby Pastre
Few people today have never neither bought nor sold anything from anyone in another state. [read post]
25 Jul 2017, 5:30 am by Dan Carvajal
Another important feature of good sales taxes is that they tax consumption once and only once. [read post]
28 Jun 2017, 9:01 pm by Joanna L. Grossman
The Alabama Supreme Court refused to give full faith and credit to the adoption decree from Georgia on the theory that Georgia did not have jurisdiction to issue a second-parent adoption decree in the first place. [read post]
5 Jun 2017, 9:00 am by Russell Spivak
The exact scope of each investigation is beyond this article, except to say that these investigations could take the place of any analogous actions or conclusions regarding impeachable offenses the Judiciary Committees could undertake (a la Clinton), or they could compel the Judiciary Committee to perform yet another substantive examination of the matter with a particular eye on impeachment (a la Nixon). [read post]