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"Richard Roe" Definitions
  1. a party to legal proceedings whose true name is unknown— compare JOHN DOE

33 Sentences With "Richard Roe"

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

The lawsuit names them only as Jane Doe, Luke Loe, Richard Roe and Mary Moe.
The two airmen, who filed lawsuit in December under the pseudonyms "Richard Roe" and "Victor Voe," were given discharge papers just days before Thanksgiving.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs, who are listed in the lawsuit with names like Jane Doe and Richard Roe, said in court papers that their clients feared retaliation if their names became public.
The lawsuit, filed by the two airmen under the pseudonyms "Richard Roe" and "Victor Voe," claim the Pentagon is discriminating against service members with HIV through a long-standing Department of Defense rule that says they can't deploy outside the US without a waiver.
The two service members, named in the suit as "Richard Roe" and "Victor Voe," argue that they "are being discharged despite the contrary recommendations of their commanding officers and physicians solely because they have tested positive" for HIV -- despite adhering to treatment plans and not showing symptoms.
In the final pages, Richard Roe is relieved of duty after a breakdown—Green's rebuke to the evolving myth of the stoical "Blitz spirit"—and becomes frustrated as he struggles to recapture the experience of firefighting: We had been ordered to Rhodesia Wharf, Surrey Commercial Docks.
The church had an early clock by Richard Roe of Epperstone which was installed in 1699.
The woman has no name. She is Mrs. Richard Roe or Mrs. John Doe, just whose Mrs.
An early clock was installed in 1680 by Richard Roe. This was replaced in 1880 by a new clock mechanism by G. & F. Cope of Nottingham.
A clock was installed in the tower in 1686 by Richard Roe of Epperstone. This was replaced in 1854 by a new one by G. & F. Cope.
Former turret clock now in Nottingham Industrial Museum From 1694 to 1906, the church had a clock by Richard Roe. This is now preserved in Nottingham Industrial Museum.
There is a peal of eight bells, of which five bells were cast by Henry Oldfield of Nottingham in 1590 and 1618. An early clock was installed in 1683 by Richard Roe. This was replaced in 1910.
Inside it has an oak-panelled, three-decker pulpit-cum-lectern with a Jacobean canopy, which is still in use.A Church Near You. Retrieved 25 May 2015. In 1680 the church installed a clock built by Richard Roe of Epperstone.
In 1811, McIntosh took a second wife, Susannah "Su-gi" Rowe, a full-blood Cherokee, daughter of Richard Roe and sister of Cherokee Nation District Judge David Rowe. Susannah Rowe is listed as both a Creek Old Settler and a Cherokee Nation Old Settler.
Roe's Thomas Street Distillery, circa. 1892. In 1757, Peter Roe purchased a small existing distillery on Thomas Street in Dublin. The premises were gradually expanded with rising trade, until the distillery fronted South Earl Street. Richard Roe continued operations at Thomas Street from 1766 to 1794.
Rather, an elaborate tale was told in the pleadings about how one John Doe leased land from the plaintiff but was ousted by Richard Roe, who claimed a contrary lease from the defendant. These events, if true, led to the "assize of novel disseisin", later called the "mixed action in ejectment", a procedure in which title could ultimately be determined, but which led instead to trial by jury. This is the origin of the names John Doe, Richard Roe, and so forth, for anonymous parties. The fiction of Doe, Roe, and the leases was not challenged by the parties unless they wished to stake their life and safety on a trial by combat.
Door frame clock made for St Mary's Church, Plumtree in 1686. Now in the British Horological Museum, Upton Hall Door frame clock made for St Giles' Church, Cropwell Bishop in 1694. Now in Nottingham Industrial Museum Richard Roe, also Rowe, (c.1640 - 1718) of Epperstone was one of the earliest clockmakers in Nottinghamshire.
Calvin Fairbank used aliases: Samuel P. King,Louisville Daily Courier, Louisville, KY 11 Nov 1851 p3 Arrest of a Kidnapper. Samuel S. King, John Doe, Richard Roe/Rowe and John Rowe.The Courier-Journal, Louisville, KY 18 Nov 1851 p3 Samuel S. King alias Calvin Fairbanks for arresting the slave of Mrs. Shotwell.
The Oxford English Dictionary states that John Doe is "the name given to the fictitious lessee of the plaintiff, in the (now obsolete in the UK) mixed action of ejectment, the fictitious defendant being called Richard Roe". This usage is mocked in the 1834 English song "John Doe and Richard Roe": This particular use became obsolete in the UK in 1852: In the UK, usage of "John Doe" survives mainly in the form of John Doe injunction or John Doe order (see above). Unlike the United States, the name "John Doe" does not actually appear in the formal name of the case, for example: X & Y v Persons Unknown [2007] HRLR 4. Well-known cases of unidentified corpses include "Cali Doe" (1979) and "Princess Doe" (1982).
Dicamay Agta is an extinct Aeta language of the northern Philippines. The Dicamay Agta lived on the Dicamay River, on the western side of the Sierra Madre near Jones, Isabela. The Dicamay Agta were killed by Ilokano homesteaders sometime between 1957 and 1974 (Lobel 2013:98). Richard Roe collected a Dicamay word list of 291 words in 1957.
The church is medieval but was heavily restored between 1873 and 1874, by George Frederick Bodley and Thomas Garner. The tower was rebuilt in 1906 by Percy Heylyn Currey. Stained glass in the east of the chancel is said to be by Burlison and Grylls. The church had an early clock by Richard Roe in 1686.
A clock was installed in 1685 by Richard Roe. The current mechanically driven clock with a face on all four sides of the tower dates from 1882, and has to be wound once a week. The clock has three weights, one for keeping time, one for the chimes and one for the clock faces. The chimes chime the 5th, 6th and 7th bells.
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decision was consistent with its ruling in Richard Roe. The decision required that a court must hold a full evidentiary hearing, with counsel representing both sides and expert witness if needed, to make the decision whether an incompetent patient should be treated. This determination was to be made on the basis of "substituted judgment", that is, on an estimation of what the patient would have desired, were he competent.
James Woolley of 1726 from the Nottingham Exchange An early clock was installed in 1699 by Richard Roe. This was replaced in 1830 by a clock by James Woolley which had previously been in the Nottingham Exchange. The diagonal clock face is thought to have been installed at the same time, and also been from the Exchange. This 1830 clock mechanism was replaced by an electric action clock in the 1970s but the clock face was retained.
In the context of law enforcement in the United States, such names are often used to refer to a corpse whose identity is unknown or unconfirmed. Secondly, such names are also often used to refer to a hypothetical "everyman" in other contexts, in a manner similar to "John Q. Public" or "Joe Public". There are many variants to the above names, including "John Roe", "Richard Roe", "Jane Roe" and "Baby Doe", "Janie Doe" or "Johnny Doe or comedic Dill" (for children).
Dion Boucicault adapted the play as Forbidden Fruit, premiered on Broadway in 1876,Huberman, p. 42 That version was given in the West End in 1880,"The Theatres", Pall Mall Gazette, 6 July 1880. p. 11 but the first version of Le Procès Veauradieux seen in London was The Great Divorce Case by "John Doe and Richard Roe" (later revealed to be Clement Scott and Arthur Mattison),"The Great Divorce Case", Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved 22 August 2020 successfully produced by Charles Wyndham at the Criterion Theatre, London, in April 1876.
The DC Street Law Program, Directed by Professor Charisma X. Howell, provides legal education to the DC population through two projects: the Street Law High Schools Clinic and the Street Law Community Clinic. Professor Richard Roe directed the Street Law High Schools Clinic since 1983. Professor Howell became the director in 2018. In the program, students introduce local high school students to the basic structure of the legal system, including the relationship among legislatures, courts, and agencies, and how citizens, especially in their world, relate to the lawmaking processes of each branch of government.
Under the legal terminology of Ancient Rome, the names "Numerius Negidius" and "Aulus Agerius" were used in relation to hypothetical defendants and plaintiffs. The name "John Doe" (or "John Doo"), "Richard Roe", along with "John Roe", were regularly invoked in English legal instruments to satisfy technical requirements governing standing and jurisdiction, beginning perhaps as early as the reign of England's King Edward III (1327–1377). Though the rationale behind the choices of Doe and Roe is unknown, there are many suggested folk etymologies. Other fictitious names for a person involved in litigation in medieval English law were "John Noakes" (or "Nokes") and "John- a-Stiles" (or "John Stiles").
The Roeites, John Roe's Society or Reformed Quakers (sometimes disparagingly, 'Deformed Quakers'), were a group of dissenting Protestants, which married and buried its members, as the Quakers did, and which flourished for a while in Calverton.Tait's Edinburgh magazine, vol. 7 (1840) pp. 432–3 Their original meeting house was a converted barn, close to the junction of Woods Lane and Dark Lane, where a large tree now stands. (). John Roe (1725–1820), who founded the sect, may have been of the same family as Robert Roe, the 'oppressed Quaker' of Epperstone, who had been in trouble in 1669 for holding illegal religious meetings, and of Richard Roe the clockmaker of the same village.
However, the court rejected the lower court's standard for determining when medications could be given involuntarily, determining that the evaluating physician was to make ultimate medication decision. The court disagreed with the trial judge that forcible medication, absent an emergency, could be administered only after an adjudication of incompetence. It also rejected the trial court's holding that voluntary patients could refuse medication, stating that a voluntary patient who wished to refuse treatment should leave the hospital. The state appealed on a writ of certiorari the US Supreme Court for review The Supreme Court granted certiorari but then remanded the case back to the Court of Appeals in the light of Richard Roe.
On 9 August 1868, under an act passed for the appointment of additional judges, he was named a justice of the court of queen's bench, sworn in on 24 Aug, and knighted by the queen at Windsor Castle on 9 December. On 19 November 1869, after sitting all day in the bail court at Westminster, he was seized with paralysis, and being removed to the Westminster Palace Hotel, died there on 24 November. He married, on 3 September 1839, Sophia Anne, eldest daughter of John Hall (or Hill), M.D., of Leicester, by whom he left four sons and four daughters. He was the author in 1854 of an elegy in which he humorously lamented the extinction of John Doe and Richard Roe from the pleadings in ejectment.
Thomas Kendall and Richard Roe. In 1696 he was counsel for the defence of Ambrose Rookwood and Peter Cook, both charged with high treason; of Cook and William Snatt, the nonjuring parsons who gave absolution on the scaffold to Sir William Parkyns; and in November he defended Sir John Fenwick, strongly deprecating the proceedings by bill of attainder, on the ground that if he were acquitted his client would still be liable to proceedings under the common law. In 1698 he was retained on behalf of the "Old" East India Company, and successfully screened his political leader, Seymour, from the imputation of bribery. In June 1699 he successfully defended Charles Duncombe against a charge of falsely endorsing exchequer bills, and four months later he was elected treasurer of the Middle Temple.
Webster attributes this to the fact that Ryle's case that subjective aspects of experience such as sensation, memory, consciousness and sense of self are not the essence of "mind" has not been universally accepted by contemporary philosophers, neuroscientists, and psychologists. Webster believes that Ryle's willingness to accept the characterization of The Concept of Mind as behaviorist misrepresents its more nuanced position, writing that Ryle's acceptance of that description is not harmless, as Ryle himself suggested. Webster stresses that Ryle does not deny the reality of what are often called internal sensations and thoughts, but simply rejects the idea that they belong to a realm logically distinct from and independent of the external realm of ordinary human behaviour. The book's style of writing was commented on more negatively by Herbert Marcuse, who observes that the way in which Ryle follows his presentation of "Descartes' Myth" as the "official doctrine" about the relation between body and mind with a preliminary demonstration of its "absurdity" which evokes "John Doe, Richard Roe, and what they think about the 'Average Taxpayer'" shows a style that moves "between the two poles of pontificating authority and easy-going chumminess," something Marcuse finds to be characteristic of philosophical behaviorism.

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