The issues in the Freehold case " demonstrate how application of a constitutional principle in a doctrinaire manner, while promoting one community interest, will disserve a competing community interest,"
12.
With all due respect to critics like Mr . DeLay, casual use of impeachment would disserve not only the federal judiciary but also the constitutional principles that have seen the United States through its worst crises,
13.
While Bush's petition claimed there would be electoral chaos unless the Supreme Court stepped in, Gore's response was that there was " no substantial federal claim and this court's intervention would disserve the national interest ."
14.
Typical requirements include that without an injunction the plaintiff would suffer " irreparable injury " for which there is " no adequate remedy at law "; that the balance of hardships does strongly cut against giving an injunction; and that the injunction would not disserve the public interest.
15.
The Supreme Court's intervention in the ballot-counting dispute would " disserve the national interest " by further prolonging the dispute and driving it in " untoward and unprecedented directions, " the Gore legal team told the justices in a 31-page brief urging prompt rejection of the Bush appeals.
16.
A deafening silence on the part of the government officials closest to this matter would disserve those who most need to hear from, and be reassured by, their government officials, and since many of the victims of this tragedy have yet to be identified, it is impossible for those officials to provide that reassurance except through statements to the media.
17.
Darcy, who prided himself on being true to his sworn word, replied indignantly " Alas my good lord that ever you a man of so much honour and great experience should advise or choose me to . . . . betray or disserve any living man . " Both he and Aske wrote to the king to set their conduct in a more favourable light.
18.
The order cited four prerequisites for " extraordinary relief, " that is, a preliminary injunction : " 1 . substantial likelihood plaintiff will prevail on the merits, 2 . substantial threat plaintiff will suffer irreparable injury if the injunction is not granted, 3 . threatened injury to the plaintiff outweighs threatened harm to the defendant, and 4 . the injunction will not disserve the public interest ."