References in periodicals archive ?
New York University law professor Stephen Gillers called it "troublesome" that the campaign-finance case ended without providing more answers, arguing that "it would disserve the public interest if the Justice Department did not eventually disclose who else was party to Michael Cohen's crime."
Promoting ignorance about the real operation of our government, whatever one's thoughts on it are, is a disserve. We're still a constitutional monarchy, we elect Members of Parliament, who then form the Government, and we do not choose a leader.
16, 2011) ("[T]he relevant question for this factor is whether the proposed injunction will disserve the public interest, not whether it will promote the public interest.").
They would tend to undermine the growth and expansion of private pension plans, be contrary to the often-expressed congressional intent that every effort be made to provide old age income assurance, and disserve the public interest in adequate retirement income."
It will be some kind of disserve to my people if I do not aspire to go to the House at this time.
own interests, even if those interests disserve the creditors'
When this intrusion is weighed against the strong public interest in vindicating constitutional rights and preventing future violations, its clear that an injunction would not disserve the public interest.
Once these select journalists, politicians, and activists who disserve us all have been discovered for their false publications, the public should act to hold them accountable, no longer patronizing, voting for, or supporting them."
Not enforcing nonreliance clauses is much worse, as it allows parties to avoid their contractual obligations and use the courts to renegotiate contracts--outcomes that disserve society even more.
"As the Supreme Court has explained, a plaintiff must satisfy a four-factor test before a court may grant permanent injunctive relief: (1) the plaintiff has suffered irreparable injury; (2) legal remedies, such as money damages, are inadequate; (3) an equitable remedy is warranted in light of the balance of hardships between the parties; and (4) a permanent injunction would not disserve the public interest" (Minnesota Vikings Football Stadium v.
The restrictions "do not serve - in fact, they disserve - the government's interest in protecting women's health, and they would close most of the clinics in Texas, leaving many women in that State with a constitutional right that 'exists in theory but not in fact,'" wrote U.S.