This opinion made the argument that the writ only allowed the judge to ask for an explanation of why the prisoner was jailed ( known as the'return'), not to debate whether that explanation was justified or to examine the facts of it ('controvert'it )-that was for a jury to do.
22.
Nowhere in plaintiff's counter-statement does she cite record evidence to controvert paragraphs 1-34 of the President's statement, which are supported by plaintiff's own testimony; the testimony of her three supervisors and the Governor's aide responsible for AIDC; Trooper Ferguson's testimony; and plaintiff's employment records.
23.
Here Saadia controverts the Mutakallamin, who considered the soul an " accident " "'arad " ( compare Guide for the Perplexed i . 74 ), and employs the following one of their premises to justify his position : " Only a substance can be the substratum of an accident " ( that is, of a non-essential property of things ).
24.
""'R v Carroll " "'( 2002 ) 213 CLR 635; & # 91; 2002 & # 93; HCA 55 is a decision of the High Court of Australia which unanimously upheld a Queensland appellate court s decision to stay an indictment for perjury as the indictment was found to controvert the respondent s earlier acquittal for murder.
25.
If among Jews he exercised for a long time only through Joseph Albo any perceptible influence, though he was studied, for instance, by Don Isaac Abravanel, who controverts especially his Messianic theories, and by Abram Shalom in his " Neveh Shalom ", Crescas'work was of prime and fundamental importance through the part it had in the shaping of Baruch Spinoza's system.
26.
Had she done an unusual act, it might have had a different construction, as was the case of Lord Litchfield and Sir John Williams, where the assignees employing the clerk of the commission to receive the debts of the bankrupt, that being unusual, the Court held they were answerable for him : but the employing a broker, in this case, appears from our evidence ( which they have examined none to controvert ) to be always customary; and where is the impropriety of it?
27.
We therefore think the Court was well warranted in " Lord Bruce's case ", to controvert the authority of the proposition, collected from what is said in " Bagg's case ", that there can be no power of amotion, unless given by charter or prescription; and we think that from the reason of the thing, from the nature of corporations, and for the sake of order and government, this power is incident, as much as the power of making bye-laws.
28.
To pursue an Educational propaganda throughout the country in furtherance of the policies that have been expounded by Mr . W . M . Hughes [ Prime Minister of Australia ]; to establish branches in every constituency and county, and to support candidates pledged to these policies in both the country and in the House of Commons; to urge the importance of the measures proposed to assist the more vigorous prosecution of the war, and to bring about its speedy and satisfactory termination, and to controvert the false economic doctrine so aptly described as'Laissez-faire '.
29.
:To have the whole sway of the house, and all domestic affairs . . . To study and practice the art of jealousy; to feign anger, melancholy, or sickness, to the life . . . These are arts that women must be well-practic'd in . . . and ought to be the only study of a widow, from the death of her first husband, to the second; from the second to the third . . . And so proportionably to the seventh, if she be so long bless'd with life . . . Besides, in all, to be singular in our will; to reign, govern, ordain laws and break'em, make quarrels and maintain'em; profess truths, devise falsehoods; protest obedience, but study nothing more than to make our husbands so; control, controvert, contradict, and be contrary to all conformity . . . Then does a husband tickle the spleen of a woman, when she can anger him, to please him; chide him, to kiss him; mad him, to humble him; make him stiff-necked, to supple him; and hard-hearted, to break him; to set him up, and take him down, and up again, and down again, when, and as often as we list.