Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
He returned to the office of Lord Justice General from 1704 to 1710.
He was appointed Lord Justice General by parliament in 1646.
Now, the Lord Justice General is the head of Scotland's judiciary.
He was raised to the bench, and in 1841 was appointed Lord Justice General.
Three days, and the Lord Justice General issued an order and let loose a thunderbolt.
This submission was accepted by the Lord Justice General and the jury were instructed to find him not guilty at the conclusion of the trial.
This is exercised through the First Minister upon the recommendation of the Lord Justice General.
Lord Justice General
In criminal cases, the Lord President is referred to as the Lord Justice General.
The office of Lord Justice General is derived from the justiciars who were appointed from the twelfth century (or even earlier).
He became Lord Justice General when that office was united with the office of Lord President in 1836.
The decision to allow cameras into a Scottish court is at the sole discretion of the trial judge, in consultation with the Lord Justice General.
Lord Justice General and Lord President of the Court of Session
The Lord Justice Clerk serves as a deputy of the Lord Justice General.
He was appointed Lord Justice General in 1682 and an Extraordinary Lord of Session on 16 November the same year.
The Court of Session's Lord President is also the High Court's Lord Justice General.
He was Lord Justice Clerk from 1811 to 1841 and Lord Justice General from 1841 to 1852.
Lord Hope, the Lord Justice General, sitting with Lords Allanbridge and MacLean rejected the appeal.
On leaving Parliament he was raised to the bench as Lord Strathclyde and appointed Lord Justice General, a post he held until 1920.
He was Governor of the Bank of Scotland from 1742 and Lord Justice General in 1761 until his death in London in 1762.
The Lord Justice General stipulated that the camera should focus solely on the trial judge and court staff and that Gilroy himself could not be filmed.
He seems to have been the author of a list of the Professors and their political sympathies sent to Ilay Campbell the Lord Justice General in 1800.
Murray left the government and parliament in February 1905, on being appointed Lord Justice General and Lord President of the Court of Session.
This was criticised by Lord Justice General Lord Hamilton, head of the Scottish judiciary, who said it undermined the independence of the judiciary.
Brian Gill, Lord Gill is the Lord President and Lord Justice General and Scotland's longest serving judge.