1-2 LEGAL DOCTRINES I. CIVIL LAW 1. Doctrine of Relations That principle of law by which an act done at one time is considered by a fiction of law to have been done at some antecedent period. It is a doctrine which‚ although of equitable origin‚ has a well-recognized application to proceedings at law; a legal fiction invented to promote the ends of justice or to prevent injustice end the occurrence of injuries where otherwise there would be no remedy. The doctrine‚ when invoked
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three-to-four (3-4) new pages that address the following: 1.Define presidential doctrine and summarize the regional or global events during the Cold War leading up to the formation of the presidential doctrine you wrote about in Assignment 1. 2.Select one country you wrote about in Assignment 1 and describe the Cold War relationship that existed between the country you selected and the U.S. before the presidential doctrine was announced. 3.Describe the relationship that currently exists between the
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shaping Christian doctrine‚ making reference to at least one doctrine that was reformed. 11/11/2013 Discuss the role of church councils in shaping Christian doctrine‚ making reference to at least one doctrine that was reformed. When Christianity took hold in the Roman Empire‚ doctrine had yet to be fixed. There have been more than seven church councils‚ but these crucial first seven‚ known as the Ecumenical Councils‚ were the most important in establishing official church doctrine. The seven councils
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ii. Implied Warranty of Merchantability 1. Elements 2. Generally 3. UCC § 2-314 4. Disclaimers of Implied Warranty of Merchantability 5. Product Malfunction Doctrine and Merchantability 6. Defenses to Implied Warranty of Merchantability iii. Implied Warranty of Fitness for Particular Purpose 1. Elements 2. Generally
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Analyze and Explain Dates: 1945-1990 Locales: Eastern/Western Europe Events: The end of world war two and the conferences during and following including Yalta‚Potsdam and Tehran. Also informations and influence of the Marshall Plan and the Truman Doctrine. The reaction of the Soviets with the Molotov Plan and COMECON and their plan to spread communism. Include the Korean war and other wars. Significance: At the end of WWII Stalin had the red army spread throughout
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the act of state doctrine. Rules of the Law(s) Applied to the Case The law applied in this case was the act of state doctrine‚ which states‚ “local courts may not question the legal effect of a foreign state’s acts fully executed within its own territory” (US Legal‚ 2013). Therefore‚ the court dismissed the action against Metropolitan Museum of Art. Analysis: How the Court Applied the Law The United States Court of Appeals‚ Second Circuit applied the act of state doctrine to this case because
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Ng Cin Yan Contract Law Ng Cin Yan Contract law is a law which regulates the commercial world by enforcing contracts.1 Contracts allow consistency and also certainty in business transactions which in turn increases business efficiency. This is because a contract sets down clearly the obligations and rights of each party in an agreement‚ hence making sure that the parties are aware of their individual responsibilities before and after consensus ad idem or in other words the meeting of
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Papal infallibility is a doctrine of the Catholic Church that teaches the pope is incapable of error in pronouncing dogma within a specific circumstance. Those outside the Church generally misunderstand the Catholic teaching on papal infallibility. In particular‚ fundamentalist Christians often confuse the charisma of papal infallibility as something that affects the pope’s status. They imagine Catholics believing the pope to be sinless or unable to sin. Some people believe papal infallibility to
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due to the depletion of resources from the war‚ and the reparations owed from the treaty. The Christian response to this‚ and other crises of the time‚ was quite interesting. While Henry Fosdick’s “Shall the Fundamentalists Win?” advocated less for doctrine and more towards a social gospel that Walter Rauschenbusch’s “Christianity and the Social Crisis” emphasized‚ Clarence MacArtney’s “Shall Unbelief Win” did not agree with Fosdick. Much of What Fosdick argued for pointed back towards the work of
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Catholicism‚ and it also looks at the precursors to the reformation. These precursors are what we know as the Renaissance humanists. Many of these ‘new thinkers’ provided new doctrines and biblical knowledge that would greatly impact the reformation. Without the Christiana humanists‚ the protestant reformation would not have changed the doctrine and beliefs of the Catholic Church. By the 15th-century Renaissance scholars applied a new style to the scriptures‚ and translated many biblical texts in their
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