Examples of Deemster in a sentence
SeeDepartment of Health v Mudhafar Al-Hiwidi (Deemster Doyle judgment 26 October 2011) at paragraph 9 stressing again the need for open justice and transparency.
The First Deemster ordered that all hearings and the trial be conducted in open court but placed restrictions on references to the identity of the settlor, the beneficiary, the size of the fund and the amounts of the proposed distributions.
Deemster Corlett inGubay v Willers (3 December 2015) dealt with an application for a hearing to be held in private.
The Deemster was sympathetic to issues of life expectancy not being reported.
On the same day as Deemster Doyle delivered his judgment inHarding the members of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom delivered their judgments in Bank Mellat v Her Majesty’s Treasury (No.1) [2013] UKSC 38 a case which also involved the fundamental principle of open justice.
See Deemster Doyle’s judgment inDelphi Trust Limited 2014 MLR 51 delivered on 4 February 2014 which considered the law in detail (probably too much) as to when it was appropriate for a court to sit in private when dealing with an application by a trustee for assistance, under the court’s inherent jurisdiction and/or section 61 of the Trustee Act 1961.
The Appellants are six of those defendants to counterclaim, who applied, successfully, to Deemster Doyle for an order setting aside the order for service out of the jurisdiction.
The reasons of the Staff of Government Division for interfering with the exercise of discretion by the Deemster were these.
See also Deemster Doyle’s judgment in Interdevelco Limited v Waste2Energy Group Holdings plc (10 October 2012) which makes reference to the principle of universalism in international insolvency cases and which should now be considered subject to the UKSC’s decision in Rubin v Eurofinance SA [2012] UKSC 46 and the decision of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Singularis [2014] UKPC 36.
Variables with possible values of Yes and No were measured based on nominal scales in which order did not matter.