|
Standing (law) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
|
Standing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Standing is a human position in which the body is held upright and supported only by the feet, referred to as an orthostatic state. Although quiet standing appears to be static, modern instrumentatio...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standing |
|||
|
|
|||
|
|||
|
|||
|
Standing To Sue Is one of the doctrines of justiciability derived from the “case or controversy” requirement of Article III (see Cases and ... Here, Congress created a right, held by everyone, of access to documents, and anyone has standing to sue if that right is invaded. Reconciling this result with a...
|
|||
|
It rejected the respondents' challenge to the Sierra Club's standing to sue, and determined that the hearing had raised questions "concerning possible excess of statutory authority, sufficiently substantial and serious to justify a preliminary injunction . . . ." The respondents appealed, and the Court of Appeals for...
|
|||
|
There is a difference between standing to sue for a remedy and law that allows the court to grant that remedy. That a court does not have the power under the law to grant a remedy is not lack of standing on the part of the plaintiff to request it.
|
|||
|
John Beisner, a laywer at O'Melveny & Myers LLP, in a Dec. 8 letter asserted Greenwich Financial Services "lacks standing to sue" under contracts that limit lawsuits unless conditions are met, including that 25 percent of bondholders request such litigation.
|
Copyright © 2009, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.