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Discover Ludwig"judicial writ" is a valid and commonly used phrase in written English, particularly in legal contexts.
It refers to a written order or command issued by a court or other judicial authority. Example: The defendant's attorney filed a motion for a judicial writ to challenge the legality of the search warrant.
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It later became a judicial writ issued from the Court of Queen's Bench, in the name of the sovereign, at the request of an individual suitor whose interests were alleged to be affected adversely by the failure of an official to act as his duty required.
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The justice would also receive fees from the parties in court, through the costs of judicial writs.
There were also thirteen Filazers, who shared counties between them according to historical divisions, and were tasked with filing judicial writs for their counties and transferring them to the Custos Brevium for filing.
We can safely limit the abuse of habeas without eliminating judicial control over the writ and its scope.
The detainees were getting more access to judicial review, he maintained, than the writ of habeas corpus would have given foreign combatants when the Constitution was adopted.
The bill seeks to exclude any other form of challenge to the home secretary's decision, whether by way of application for a writ of habeas corpus or judicial review.
Writs began to be used in judicial matters by the Norman kings, who developed set formulas for them.
But the council also appeared to join Mr. Mekki in urging the president to scale back his writ, calling for limiting the immunity from judicial review to "laws and decisions issued by the president as sovereignty acts," a reference to Egyptian legal precedents that could justify such executive action in certain circumstances.
This concern was evident in Scalia's dissent in the Hamdi case, in which he asserted that an American citizen in his home country is always entitled to a judicial hearing justifying detention - unless Congress suspends the writ of habeas corpus.
Bias and distortion can indeed enter in many ways into the production of science for courtroom use, as they can into the production of science writ large (Krimsky 2003), and more aggressive judicial gatekeeping would be well warranted if it could serve as an effective filter against potential excesses of party-generated expertise.
The president's order meant that military authorities could arrest persons thought to be aiding the Confederacy, detain them indefinitely without judicial hearings and ignore a judge's issuance of a writ of habeas corpus.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com