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78 Sentences With "extraneous to"

How to use extraneous to in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "extraneous to" and check conjugation/comparative form for "extraneous to". Mastering all the usages of "extraneous to" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The first is that Iraq was extraneous to that war, such as it was, extraneous to the American effort to combat international violent movements like Al Qaeda.
Like Schembri, Cardona has always insisted he is extraneous to the case.
Rather, they are meritless because the grievances are extraneous to the conditions for impeachment.
Keope is a subcontractor of Euroshoes, and Tod's is completely extraneous to their relationship.
The outlier is not extraneous to the type; the outlier is essential to the type.
"Any administrative discipline imposed on those officers is extraneous to the findings in this memo," it says.
Presidential nominees also can win or lose for reasons extraneous to themselves; for example, a president's own standing.
The artist's titles are often long, usually contradictory, and seemingly extraneous to many of the images they describe.
He prefers "distiller": someone who boils away everything extraneous to render the essence of the story he's telling.
While this cast of characters are Greenwold's wife and friends, I think it is extraneous to focus on that.
Conduct that is not illegal would seem to be extraneous to proving a supervisor fell short in his oversight responsibilities.
An athlete basically has to engage in illegal activity for attributes extraneous to ability to affect his or her career (and even then . . . ).
Short rallies ending in errors are relegated to our short-term memory, quickly dismissed as being irrelevant and extraneous to the final outcome.
Attributes extraneous to merit, such as gender, skin color, physical ableness, and family income, are not supposed to constrain the choice of educational pathways.
Moore concedes that some Calvinists might suffer a "deadening of the missionary impulse," if they conclude that missionary work is extraneous to God's plans.
By contrast, the Trump boycotts, from both the left and the right, have been driven by issues extraneous to the targets' core business practices.
Tabards were a theme, gorgeously bejewelled, but they seemed extraneous to the clothes they decorated, and one of them looked like a lobster bib.
But if European departments could once excuse themselves as extraneous to efforts toward equity in historically white institutions, that time has come to an end.
Some of the Trail scenes are vivid and graphic depictions of the paranoia and panic prompted by the closet, but they seem extraneous to the larger story.
Mr. Trump's plan, aides say, is to act as if the report itself is extraneous to the attorney general's summary, which the president has said exonerated him.
Arendt considered those individual voices extraneous to the question of Eichmann's guilt, but victims' testimonies have since become a central plank in the practice of international justice.
Dodo and Jan both seem strangely extraneous to the conflict most central for Ms. Mazzoli and Mr. Vavrek: that between Bess and the crowd that uses and rejects her.
"I'm sure it's frustrating for him to have the media constantly asking himself about something that really is extraneous to his campaign, but he's stayed on message," he said.
Yet this liberty came in the shape of what has become known as a "system change" — an event extraneous to the will of people, akin to a gift from the heavens.
Plan of attack: As Mr. Barr prepares to submit a redacted version of the report, Mr. Trump, aides said, will act as if the report itself is extraneous to Mr. Barr's brief letter.
Extraneous to the novel itself, but not irrelevant to its fate, is the seven-figure advance that is said to have resulted from a ten-bidder auction before last year's London Book Fair.
I cut out the parts of the landscape that I thought were extraneous to the action of light moving across and down the rock, and added a deep golden color to the negative space.
In response to a request for comment from Mascetti, his lawyer told BuzzFeed News in an email that he strongly denied any knowledge whatsoever of the events as described and was "totally extraneous" to these.
Now, as Mr. Barr prepares to submit a redacted version of the report, Mr. Trump's plan of attack, aides said, is to act as if the report itself is extraneous to Mr. Barr's brief letter.
Ultimately, she said, she realized she didn't need it: It was extraneous to the story, and she came up with something else — a close-cropped make-out scene — before the actors even got to set.
Named after Robert Byrd of West Virginia, who was the longest-serving senator in history, the rule says that senators can stop a bill under this special procedure if it contains matter "extraneous" to the federal budget.
The judge ruled that cutting people off of Medicaid because they do not meet requirements that are "completely extraneous" to receiving medical assistance were not legitimate grounds for the federal government to approve changes to Medicaid, Jost said.
But the show has never been as ruthless as it should be in jettisoning some of its non-Masters and Johnson characters, particularly Bill's wife, Libby (Caitlin FitzGerald), who is very good but often seems completely extraneous to the action.
It is Martin's great strength that so many of them—including a number who never made it into the show—are so rich and real, but they too are ultimately extraneous to the main plot revolving around Jon and Dany.
As Vox's Dylan Scott wrote, based on these numbers, the Senate parliamentarian could decide whether the bill runs afoul of the Byrd Rule, which prohibits regulatory changes "extraneous" to the budget process from being passed through reconciliation on a simple majority vote.
U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson sided with Stone's attorneys, who argued that showing the clip from the Mafia-themed 1974 Francis Ford Coppola film "Godfather II" could inflame jurors and unfairly introduce issues extraneous to the lying-to-Congress and witness-tampering charges against Stone.
In North Africa, a woman's jewelry — such as the Moroccan "Khamsat (mains) ciselées motifs" Hamsas (silver hands of Fatima) and the "Collier Khamsat" from Aurès, Algeria — has symbolic, magical meanings extraneous to its ornamental function, and the objects are used as charms and talismans to protect against evil eyes.
In such a case, despite his/her negative assessment of the likelihood of a guilty verdict (based on factors extraneous to an objective view of the law and the facts), the prosecutor may properly conclude that it is necessary and desirable to commence or recommend prosecution and allow the criminal process to operate in accordance with its principles.
Part of the reason "Halloween" has aged so well — when it screened at a Times Square theater this month, the crowd still gasped and screamed — is that it plays no topical notes and wastes little time on character development, plot, theme or any other elements extraneous to the critical business of sending shudders down your spine.
Ultimately, Senate Democrats were able to remove the provision from the final bill by citing the "Byrd Rule," a 1974 provision that allows senators to block legislation during the reconciliation process of negotiations on budgetary matters between House and Senate if that legislation contains material deemed to be "extraneous" to the financial substance of the bill.
The battle itself won't be extraneous to the storyline — we've spent the first two episodes of the season reuniting long-separated characters and setting the table for a violent climax, so to skip over the actual battle would be unfair — but the sheer amount of time audiences will be forced to watch soldiers fight in the dark almost certainly will be.
Senate Democrats told reporters after the House held its initial vote Tuesday afternoon that the Senate parliamentarian, who makes sure legislation sticks to designated procedure, determined that three provisions in the bill the House passed violate the so-called Byrd rule, which requires legislation under the Senate's reconciliation procedure to not impact policy areas that are deemed extraneous to the topic at hand.
Democrats thought that when Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE came to power they could use the budget as a hammer to hold over Republican heads, and particularly the president's head, to get items extraneous to the budget included by threatening to shut down the government.
Standing in line at the pharmacy in an Amarillo Walmart superstore, I imagined some kid who had moved only, or mostly, through such bland, bright spaces, spaces constructed to suit the purposes of distant profit, and it occurred to me how easy it would be, in that life, to feel powerless, to feel that the local was lame, the abstract extraneous, to feel that the only valid words were those of materialism ("get" and "rise")—words that are perfectly embodied by the candidate of the moment.
As this structure is embedded in the retractor muscle itself rather than extraneous to it, it may represent a unique development in animals.
A judge can follow the first in civil cases even when doubt remains, not so the second. The former places the burden of proof on the adversary, but the latter does not. Finally, the first is considered of itself equivalent to proof, while the second needs corroboration from something extraneous to itself.
The efficacy of higher amount of guidance is dependent on the level of detail and guidance applicability. Having multiple types of guidance (i.e. worked examples, feedback) can cause them to interact and reinforce each other. Multiple conditions do not guarantee greater learning, as certain types of guidance can be extraneous to the learning goals or the modality of learning.
M.C. wore street clothes, tracksuits, sneakers, one even wore glasses. Their only possible concession to an image extraneous to that of kids on the street was the stylistic flourish of black fedoras atop their heads. This stood in sharp contrast to the popular artists of the time, who had variously bedecked themselves with feathers, suede boots, jerri curls, and red or even pink leather suits.
If in some works the traces of Passignano and of Ligozzi are clearly recognizable, in others they play elements extraneous to the Florentine environment, probably acquired during the Roman stay; while in some, as in the San Nicola da Tolentino of Prato, the "echoes of the Flemish-Caravaggio world" are evident. Among the stylistic components of the eclectic painter, however, is the derivation from the art of Matteo Rosselli.
It further said that, while parties to a contract are allowed to pursue their own legitimate commercial interests within the framework of a contract, to do so for a purpose extraneous to the contract would be a breach of good faith. The court held that Burger King's actions in denying financial and operating approval for new restaurants were not the legitimate pursuit of interests under the Development Agreement, but were rather efforts to harm or hinder Hungry Jack's.
Two months later they went abroad, where they remained for over four years (until July 1871). Shortly before their departure two of Dostoevsky's creditors filed charges against him. During a stop in Baden, Dostoevsky lost all of his money playing roulette, as well as his wife's clothes and belongings. Anna seems to have succeeded, like Dostoevsky himself, in divorcing his gambling mania from his moral personality, and in regarding it as something extraneous to his true character.
Because time was running out on a wide range of bills acceptable to both the House and Senate, the House Rules Committee also included a large number of provisions extraneous to national defense. Most of these pertained to interior, natural resources, wilderness areas, and memorials. One of the provisions contained the text of H.R. 863. On December 4, 2014, the House voted overwhelming to approve the text of H.R. 3979 as offered in Rules Committee Print 113–58.
These > thinkers seem to have maintained a modified observational standpoint for the > introduction of natural numbers, for the principle of complete induction > [...] For these, even for such theorems as were deduced by means of > classical logic, they postulated an existence and exactness independent of > language and logic and regarded its non-contradictority as certain, even > without logical proof. For the continuum, however, they seem not to have > sought an origin strictly extraneous to language and logic.
In its decision, the Court said that Burger King sought to engineer a default of the franchise agreement so that the company could limit the number of new Hungry Jack's branded restaurants and ultimately claim the Australian market as its own, which was a purpose that was extraneous to the agreement. The case introduced the American legal concept of good faith negotiations into the Australian legal system, which until the time of the verdict had been rarely used in the Australian court systems.
Mill 1843/1930. p. 333 Some thinkers contend that analogical induction is a subcategory of inductive generalization because it assumes a pre-established uniformity governing events. Analogical induction requires an auxiliary examination of the relevancy of the characteristics cited as common to the pair. In the preceding example, if a premise were added stating that both stones were mentioned in the records of early Spanish explorers, this common attribute is extraneous to the stones and does not contribute to their probable affinity.
Tymoczko's "Generalizing Musical Intervals"Tymoczko, Dmitri, "Generalizing Musical Intervals," Journal of Music Theory 53/2 (2009): 227–254. contains one of the few extended critiques of transformational theory, arguing (1) that intervals are sometimes "local" objects that, like vectors, cannot be transported around a musical space; (2) that musical spaces often have boundaries, or multiple paths between the same points, both prohibited by Lewin's formalism; and (3) that transformational theory implicitly relies on notions of distance extraneous to the formalism as such.
" But the progress of the arts is finished when they have found the beautiful and learned how to express it." Perfection, for Giordani, was reached by the Greek and Latin writers and, later, by the Italians. He admitted that there are many tastes, but believed that these tastes are all conformable to the different characters of the various populations and cultures of the world. And it is precisely for this reason that Italian taste, offspring of Greco-Roman taste, is completely extraneous to that of, e.g.
That is, the concepts of reason and of consequent, as reciprocally relative, involve and suppose each other. :The logical significance of this law: The logical significance of the law of Reason and Consequent lies in this, - That in virtue of it, thought is constituted into a series of acts all indissolubly connected; each necessarily inferring the other. Thus it is that the distinction and opposition of possible, actual and necessary matter, which has been introduced into Logic, is a doctrine wholly extraneous to this science.
Latent ambiguity is where the wording of an instrument is on the face of it clear and intelligible, but may, at the same time, apply equally to two different things or subject matters, as where a legacy is given "to my nephew, John," and the testator is shown to have two nephews of that name. A latent ambiguity may be explained by parol evidence: the ambiguity has been brought about by circumstances extraneous to the instrument, so the explanation must necessarily be sought in such circumstances.
One of these factors is the cognition that it offers to the human mind; the other is the affection that teaches how to fulfill human hearts. The common science lacks this affection, this force; it is cold and rigid, and sometimes speculative and intemperate, as in the case of philosophy; conversely, Logosophy is conciliatory. Herein lies the great difference and which also explains why it is capable of realizing great accomplishments in the human soul and which seem inconceivable to those who remain extraneous to such possibilities.”González Pecotche, Carlos Bernardo. “An Introduction to Logosophical Cognition”.
After four years of seemingly ineffective protest, the disclaimer requirement was repealed in the Fall of 1962 by President John F. Kennedy who was spurred by an incident extraneous to universities' protests. In particular, following the public disclosure of the case of a National Science Foundation Fellowship recipient who had run into trouble with the House Un- American Activities Committee, and had been convicted of contempt of Congress.Schwegler 99-100 Kennedy interpreted this case proved the affidavit clause to be ineffective, and, in spite of—rather than because of—protest prior to 1961, the disclaimer requirement was excised.
United States v. Kahriger, 345 U.S. 22 (1953), was a United States Supreme Court ruling that held certain provisions of the Revenue Act of 1951 were constitutional, in particular sections related to an occupational tax on persons involved in gambling.. The Supreme Court ruled that the Congressional purpose of penalizing intrastate gambling under the guise of imposing a tax did not violate the Constitution by infringing the police power reserved to the states. The Court stated: "Unless there are [penalty] provisions extraneous to any tax need, courts are without authority to limit the exercise of the taxing power."Gerald Gunther, Constitutional Law, p.
However the order's modern ecumenical structure today makes it extraneous to Canon Law, though since Second Vatican Council, in the spirit of promoting Ecumenism, The Holy See has promoted the right of recognition to institutions that do not fall strictly under the precepts of Canon Law. The Holy See has repeatedly felt the need to clarify the fact that the Order of Saint Lazarus no longer falls under its jurisdiction. It is however pertinent to point out that The Holy See does not recognize any order but its own equestrian orders, or those under its protection (e.g., the Sovereign Military Order of Malta and the Order of the Holy Sepulchre).
The signing of the treaty ended the joint occupation with the United Kingdom, making most Oregonians south of the 49th parallel U.S. citizens. Henry Commager appraised the factors leading to the settlement as "a combination of temporary, fortuitous, and circumstantial phenomena, extraneous to the local situation, largely outside of American control, and foreign to American influence." Canadian Hugh LL. Keenlyside and American Gerald S. Brown wrote a century after the treaty that The terms of the Oregon Treaty were essentially the same ones that had been offered earlier by the Tyler administration, and thus represented a diplomatic victory for Polk. However, Polk has often been criticized for his handling of the Oregon Question.
The system equated Instinct with Will. Further it viewed Will as the manifest cause of both the conscious and unconscious act. Lighthall stated: 'All living action is willing, and all is by nature purposive.' Lighthall informed his readers that it was the phenomenon of the altruistic act that had been the initial "middle" ground that had led him to the formulation of the theory: :'The utilitarian school, with its intellectual solutions on the basis of joy and pains, reflected by sympathy, appeared to me to give a reasonable account of most other moral acts,-but that an individual could deliberately annihilate himself for another evidently imported some element extraneous to the individual's own ordinary machinery of willing.
Malta's Police Force (MPF) is one of the oldest in Europe, with the Maltese government taking over the force in 1921 following the grant of self-governance. There are approximately 1,900 members in the Force. Under the Police Act of 1961, Part V deals with the use of force, where"police officers may use such moderate and proportionate force as may be necessary [...]" (Article 96); however, according to Article 100, "It shall be considered as an offence against discipline if a police officer uses force for considerations extraneous to those permitted by law and the circumstances of the case". As such, Malta recognizes the illegality of police brutality and can prosecute offending officials on these grounds.
His easel was covered with Persian blue velvet, the painting on the easel was already framed, his chair was upholstered in red velvet and on his palette the colors were arranged with the precision of a Byzantine mosaic. In a corner stand were his latest works, framed and ready to be sent off to his next exhibition in Europe or America. Donati was a born host with a warm welcome, an elegant man who possessed enormous charm a good nature and a keen sense of humor. Apparently shy, he preferred to speak on subjects extraneous to his art, purposely distracting you from his paintings, then leading you back to them, tactfully and without pretension.
In his version of parliamentary democracy, political parties are > viewed as entities extraneous to Parliament and play no role in the day to > day operations of government. Mr Brady went on to compound the anti > democratic, effect of the solicitor general's opinion by confining his > investigation into "unlawful" parliamentary expenditure to election > advertising. It was this decision, another "cock up", which allowed the > Opposition to set in motion a major political conspiracy... The auditor > general's office and the news media had both become important adjuncts to > the Opposition's campaign to destroy Labour's political reputation. As officers of Parliament, the capacity of the Auditor-General and Solicitor- General to respond to criticism is limited.
In Tibetan Buddhist Dzogchen literature, luminosity (od gsal) is associated with an aspect of the Ground termed "spontaneous presence" (Lhun grub), meaning a presence that is uncreated and not based on anything causally extraneous to itself.Van Schaik; Approaching the Great Perfection: Simultaneous and Gradual Methods of Dzogchen Practice in the Longchen Nyingtig (Studies in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism), 2004, 52 This term is often paired with 'original-purity' (ka dag), which is associated with emptiness (shunyata), and are both seen as inseparable aspects of the Ground. Other terms used to describe this aspect are dynamism or creative power (rtsal) and radiance (dwangs).Van Schaik; Approaching the Great Perfection: Simultaneous and Gradual Methods of Dzogchen Practice in the Longchen Nyingtig (Studies in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism), 2004, 54.
For example, while one of a set of collocated MSL OS may be configured to affix the character string "SECRET" to all output, that OS has no understanding of how the data compares in sensitivity and criticality to the data processed by its peer OS that affixes the string "UNCLASSIFIED" to all of its output. Operating across two or more security levels then, must use methods extraneous to the purview of the MSL "operating systems" per se, and needing human intervention, termed "manual review". For example, an independent monitor (not in Brinch Hansen's sense of the term) may be provided to support migration of data among multiple MSL peers (e.g., copying a data file from the UNCLASSIFIED peer to the SECRET peer).
Congress can thus pass a maximum of three reconciliation bills per year, though in practice it has often passed a single reconciliation bill affecting both spending and revenue. Policy changes that are extraneous to the budget are limited by the "Byrd Rule", which also prohibits reconciliation bills from increasing the federal deficit after a ten-year period or making changes to Social Security. The reconciliation process was created by the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 and was first used in 1980. Bills passed using the reconciliation process include the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985, the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act of 1996, the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001, the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, and the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.
A document dump is the act of responding to an adversary's request for information by presenting the adversary with a large quantity of data that is transferred in a manner that indicates unfriendliness, hostility, or a legal conflict between the transmitter and the receiver of the information. The shipment of dumped documents is unsorted, or contains a large quantity of information that is extraneous to the issue under inquiry, or is presented in an untimely manner, or some combination of these three characteristics. The phrase is often used by lawyers, but is in increasing use in the blogosphere. It is often seen as part of the characteristic behavior of an entity that is engaging in an ongoing pattern of activities intended to cover up unethical or criminal conduct.
Professionally, in the Venetian republic of the Late–Renaissance, for an artist, painting crowd scenes had acquired political ramifications regarding who and what appeared in a religious painting commissioned from him, regardless of the patron or patroness. A decade earlier, the Benedictine monks who commissioned The Wedding at Cana (1563) had directed Veronese, as an artist, to freely include as many human figures as would fit in the banquet scene. In contrast, a decade later, Veronese encountered legal, religious constraints that determined the suitability (theological, political, sociological) of who and what he depicted in a painting—thus, on 18 July 1573, the Inquisition legally summoned Veronese before a tribunal, to explain the presence of what Church doctrine considered characters, animals, and indecorum extraneous to an image of the Last Supper of the Christ.Rearick, p.
In 1634, Thomas Heywood turned the tale of Cupid and Psyche into a masque for the court of Charles I.Entry on "Apuleius," Classical Tradition, p. 57. Lully's Psyché (1678) is a Baroque French opera (a "tragédie lyrique") based on the 1671 play by Molière, which had musical intermèdes by Lully. Matthew Locke's semi-opera Psyche (1675) is a loose reworking from the 1671 production. In 1800, Ludwig Abeille premièred his four-act German opera (singspiel) Amor und Psyche, with a libretto by Franz Carl Hiemer based on Apuleius. Bouguereau In the 19th century, Cupid and Psyche was a source for "transformations," visual interludes involving tableaux vivants, transparencies and stage machinery that were presented between the scenes of a pantomime but extraneous to the plot.Anita Callaway, Visual Ephemera: Theatrical Art in Nineteenth-Century Australia (University of New South Wales Press, 2000), p. 177.
Criticism from abroad came from Ian Kershaw, Gordon A. Craig, Richard J. Evans, Saul Friedländer, John Lukacs, Michael Marrus, and Timothy Mason. Mason wrote against Nolte in a call for the sort of theories of generic fascism that Nolte himself had once championed: > “If we can do without much of the original contents of the concept of > ‘fascism’, we cannot do without comparison. “Historicization” may easily > become a recipe for provincialism. And the moral absolutes of Habermas, > however politically and didactically impeccable, also carry a shadow of > provincialism, as long as they fail to recognize that fascism was a > continental phenomenon and that Nazism was a peculiar part of something much > larger. Pol Pot, the rat torture and the fate of the Armenians are all > extraneous to any serious discussion of Nazism; Mussolini’s Italy is > not.”Mason, Timothy “Whatever Happened to ‘Fascism’?” pp.
All of the young British sculptors who emerged in the 1950s had to engage with the towering international reputation of Henry Moore, and with the associated fallacy that direct carving was congruent with modernity. But at least the weight of Moore’s eminence was a crucial factor in provoking a reaction; Roy Noakes embarked on a fascinating and important journey in a very different direction.M Harrison ‘Roy Noakes’ (2003) Roy Noakes Sculpture and Paper Works, Arts Council, 2009 Noakes dedicated his life to evolving an alternative sculptural language, one concerned with transience and lightness, to conveying fleeting appearances and gestures with economy of means - pared down, that is, in the sense of needing to eliminate everything that was extraneous to the inner energy of his forms. He worked outside the mainstream or avant-garde cultural orthodoxies of his time, neither a brutalist, a conceptualist, nor involved with smooth or shiny surfaces that were barriers to expressing the dynamic potential of his materials. Noakes’s surfaces were active, not static.
Additionally, Burger King Corporation sought to limit Hungry Jack's ability to open new locations in the country, whether they were corporate locations or third-party licensees. As a result of Burger King's actions, Hungry Jack's owner Jack Cowin and his company Competitive Foods Australia, began legal proceedings in 2001 against the Burger King Corporation claiming Burger King Corporation had violated the conditions of the master franchising agreement and was in breach of the contract. The Supreme Court of New South Wales agreed with Cowin and determined that Burger King Corporation had violated the terms of the contract and awarded Hungry Jack's A$46.9 million.. In its decision, the Court said that Burger King sought to engineer a default of the franchise agreement so that the company could limit the number of new Hungry Jack's branded restaurants and ultimately claim the Australian market as its own, which was a purpose that was extraneous to the agreement.Burger King obtained special leave to appeal to the High Court:, however the appeal was later dismissed by consent: .
In a decision handed down by the Supreme Court of New South Wales that affirmed Cowin's claims, Burger King was determined to have violated the terms of the contract and as a result was required to pay Cowin and Hungry Jack's a A$46.9 million (US$41.6 million 2001) award.Burger King Corporation v Hungry Jack's Pty Ltd The court's decision was one of the first major cases in Australia that implied that the American legal concept of good faith negotiations existed with the framework of the Australian legal system, which until that verdict, had rarely been seen in the country's courts. In its decision, the Court stated that Burger King had failed to act in good faith during contract negotiations by seeking to include standards and clauses that would engineer a default of the franchise agreement, allowing the company to limit the number of new Hungry Jack's branded restaurants and ultimately claim the Australian market as its own, a purpose that was extraneous to the agreement.Burger King obtained special leave to appeal to the High Court:, however the appeal was later dismissed by consent: .

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