Search results for: "license" (951 results)
asset that will be undervalued by a court or by dragging their feet in a negotiation over a license. The various defenses of disproportionate
and . . . any health care provider doing so shall have his or her license to practice revoked . . . .”); Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 161.702 (West
any health care provider doing so shall have his or her license to practice revoked . . . .”); Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 161.702 (West
at all, with no criteria other than judicial discretion to license or prohibit it.278 This interpretation only makes sense, however, if one
herself as forty-five years old, entering that age on the couple’s marriage license; in fact, she was sixty-two when she wed McGlone.195 Snyder had
or license-based system of regulation and supervision, in which financial institutions are placed in mutually exclusive regulatory categories. This
Brennan, J.) (dissenting from the per curiam opinion and criticizing fundamental fairness approach as giving “license the yale law journal 132
forfeiture statutes). 19. See Pimentel, supra note 11, at 13. 20. See, e.g., LEONARD W. LEVY, A LICENSE TO STEAL: THE FORFEITURE OF PROPERTY 161-66 (1996
man failed to produce a fishing license on request, one officer walked to the rock, found a margarine container underneath, and opened it to find
license technology patents. The SPLIT would have the same governance and tax rules as a REIT. SPLITs could raise money from the public to purchase