The consultancy counted among its early clients several companies that wanted to know if their business practices violated anti-trust law.
Much of this country's trust law is based on some creaky, almost feudal, notions about the distinction between principal and income.
One test of whether the deal constitutes a violation of anti-trust law is whether it gives Google significant control over Yahoo!'
Yet polling conducted by Thomas Reuters Trust Law, shows that India is the worst G20 country to be a woman.
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To briefly conclude, trust protectors remain a murky area of trust law.
It has spawned a number of industries (telegraph, telephone, radio, TV, film, recorded sound and music) and vast academic empires in economics and anti-trust law.
So, from a purely trust law perspective, the moves makes sense.
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Unlike the cartels and corporate coalitions he addressed in his books on anti-trust law, Microsoft is a single company that gained a dominant market position.
It agreed to a settlement with US authors and publishers but is renegotiating after the US Justice Department concluded that the deal violates anti-trust law.
Trust law once made an elaborate distinction between principal and income.
Local immigrant communities need to be able to trust law enforcement, or they'll never cooperate with them as witnesses or report crimes when they're the victims.
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Gorin, who helped write comments for the American Bar Association's trust law section arguing that the IRS should attack "perceived abuses" without ending the gains deferral.
But Snyder said a ruling against Apple would mark the first time in anti-trust law history in which a new entrant in a market was condemned when its presence benefited consumers.
Anti-trust law is of course based on the idea that some companies can grow too large, and in doing so, might be able to exert economy-sapping control over markets for certain goods.
He believes there's one chief reason for that: Few South Africans trust law enforcement because in recent years, the police force has become politicized, with higher ranking officers who are politically appointed.
The 183-page document aims to replace the current muddle of state-specific trust law (most of it common law ad-libbed over the past two centuries by judges) with a consistent, comprehensive and up-to-date code.
Sometimes I think they are so after GOOGLE that they dont care whether or not Facebook breaks anti-trust law and thus they allowed a merger of the 2 strongst photo based social networks.
On the Senate's legislative calendar this week is a bill to repeal tax incentives for oil companies, punish companies for reaping "windfall profits" and subject the Organization for Petroleum Exporting Countries to U.S. anti-trust law.
He called for major reforms in the application of anti-trust law, arguing for narrow view of anti-trust law that would regulate only the most obvious and egregious examples of price-fixing by corporate coalitions and mergers that would eliminate competition.
Anti-trust law is rooted in the assumption that powerful business entities will keep out new competitors if their rise is unchecked, but ESPN's ascent from weakling to sports behemoth proves that the present is a faulty predictor of the future.
In short, a business that is already outside normal anti-trust law (thanks to an ancient ruling that treats each game as a discrete activity within a single state, and thus exempt from the laws of interstate commerce) would become even more like a cartel.
And early in his career in the mid-1970s, he wrote two books on anti-trust case history and law.
Americans trust family and local law enforcement more than government or larger institutions.
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Saying that Labour had previously raised concerns about Libor, she told MPs that the opposition would be "calling for the strongest punishment for those who have broken trust and broken the law".
Even though the Trust was domiciled in the Cook Islands, the Court applied Illinois law to penetrate the Cook Islands Trust as to a Illinois settlor and Illinois property.
The Second Amendment was designed to ensure that individuals retained the right and means to defend themselves against any illegitimate attempt to do them harm, be it an attempt by a private outlaw or government agents violating their trust under the color of law.
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If I'm superb at shopping, a super-user whose word is law for those who trust me for recommendations, how come I'm not paid to shop?
West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust welcomed the report and David Law, chief executive, said he was pleased the report had recognised "significant improvements" in certain areas.
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Under Massachusetts law, a charitable trust can deviate from its initial charter, but only if the mission essentially becomes impossible to carry out or runs into unforeseen problems.
Predatory pricing by health insurance companies is OK. These practices normally illegal under federal anti-trust regulation are protected by law.
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