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the joinder
noun
The joining a litigant to a suit.
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Enough to say that there was an opening for the avant-garde to embrace our present paradigm shift at the time Goldsmith was publishing Soliloquy (2002) -- that is, there was a moment in which the avant-garde threatened to collapse the praxes of art and life and become fully complicit in the operation of that joinder -- and a turn was made into the White House parking lot instead.
What was to occur next the joinder of the indictments affected the course of the remainder of the proceedings.
The Prosecution also argued that joinder of the three indictments would lead to a more fair and expeditious trial for Milošević.
According to the bill, fee shifting and joinder would be on the table only when a lawsuit is deemed not to be "reasonably justified in law and fact," and suits filed by a university wouldn't fall into that category, Petricone says.
On 27 November 2001, the Prosecution filed a motion for joinder pursuant to Rule 49, in which it sought to join the three indictments against Milošević into a single trial (Prosecutor v. Milošević, Milutinović, Šainović, Ojdanić, and Stojiljković 27 November 2001; Motion for Joinder 10 December 2001).
The Prosecution asserted that the following considerations supported its motion for joinder.
Two days later, the Trial Chamber issued its written decision on joinder (Prosecutor v. Milošević 13 December 2001).
The bill isn't clear enough about when fee shifting and joinder would apply, they argue, and it places excessive burden on the parties asserting their patents to prove they are not bad actors.
This "involuntary joinder" is intended to hold parent companies responsible for the actions of shell companies set up solely to file lawsuits.
But these so-called mass joinder lawsuits being advertised in mailings are fraudulent — sent out by companies purporting to be law firms, according to a consumer alert posted on the Federal Trade Commission's Web site.
The F.T.C. last month filed a lawsuit against one operation based in Santa Ana, Calif., asserting that it had persuaded more than 1,000 homeowners nationwide to pay $6,000 to $10,000 each to join "mass joinder" suits, which are akin to class-action suits.
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