Constitutional authority definition
Examples of Constitutional authority in a sentence
He shall have no power to rule upon the exercise of the Employer's reserved rights or the Constitutional authority of the Sheriff except as those rights and powers are expressly limited by this Agreement.
Such amount shall be the current constitutional Union dues or its equivalent as prescribed by the Constitutional authority of the United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial and Service Workers International Union.
Such amount shall be the current constitutional Union dues or its equivalent as prescribed by the Constitutional authority of the United Steelworkers of America.
He shall have no power to rule upon the exercise of the Employer’s reserved rights or the Constitutional authority of the Sheriff except as those rights and powers are expressly limited by this Agreement.
Excluded from arbitration are grievances which question the exercise of rights set forth in Section 4 of this Agreement, entitled MANAGEMENT RIGHTS, or which question the use or application of any right over which the Employer is given unilateral discretion in this Agreement nor shall the arbitrator have the right to rule upon the exercise of the reserved rights or Constitutional authority of the Sheriff.
Such amount shall be the current constitutional Union dues or its equivalent as prescribed by the Constitutional authority of the United Steel- workers of America.
In addition to the sweeping Constitutional authority, this Court has the general legislative grant of authority under A.R.S. § 12-123, “Jurisdiction and powers,” stating, in pertinent part, “B.
Nothing in this provision shall be construed to prevent the National Board or Convention from modifying the provisions that remain in force and effect after the termination of this Agreement pursuant to their Constitutional authority.
Such amount shall be the current constitutional Union dues or its equivalent as pre- scribed by the Constitutional authority of the United Steelworkers of America.
This Executive latitude is enabled by gray areas in Constitutional authorities where Presidents may make policy decisions to commit military force with relatively little input from the Legislative branch of government that represents the will of the American people and who possess the Constitutional authority to declare war.