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Well, there was nothing like a contested will to test brave statements like that.
Almost certainly, he said, the states that are usually highly contested will oppose it, fearing the loss of attention and campaign spending.
Now, in "Contested Will," he addresses the authorship question itself.
Contested wills, the bread and butter of many professional document examiners, are frequently subjected to spectral analysis.
Most important, though, in Summer 2013, Black's long-awaited book Gettysburg Contested will be released.
Against Glenn's will, Manny takes a case of a contested will that may involve the ownership of the agency.
Contested wills
Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare?
During the court fight, lawyers from both sides received the largest collection of legal fees ever awarded in a case involving a contested will, more than $20 million.
The member for Bourke, Doris Blackburn (Independent Labor), contested Wills.
The book's major concern is the law of Chancery - in particular a case called Jarndyce and Jarndyce, a decades-long dispute over contested wills.
she travelled through 19th-century Dublin, "taking in red light districts, millionaire solicitors, pawnbrokers, contested wills, illegitimate children and murder."
In 2010 James S. Shapiro surveyed the authorship question in Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare?
Students in a course on wills and trusts, he ventured, might spend a session watching a squabble over a contested will at the probate court at the state courthouse.
The other two raisings were more usual; a contested will, and a prosecution's star witness that had had the bad taste to have a heart attack before testifying in court.
CONTESTED WILL: Who Wrote Shakespeare?
His widow, Lady Agnes Cheyne, left the manor house in a contested will to her niece, Anne Semark, wife of Sir David Phelip in 1494.
Shapiro's study of the history of scepticism over Shakespeare's authorship, entitled Contested Will, has been hailed by Stephen Marche as the 'definitive treatment' of Oxfordian theory.
Examiners are hired by lawyers, police departments and individuals to analyze contested wills, determine whether medical or insurance records have been altered and authenticate handwriting and signatures in letters and contracts.
When the admittedly genuine signature on the first page of the contested will was compared with that on the second, all 30 downstrokes coincided, suggesting that the second signature was a tracing of the first.
The sports to be contested will coincide with those scheduled for the senior Games, however there will be variations on the sports including mixed NOC and mixed gender teams as well as a reduced number of disciplines and events.
Less than a year later, the Sellmans quit, along with a number of other long time board members like Tahahlita, because of Daniel's refusal to negotiate a settlement over the Tonopah site lawsuit related to Enid Smith's contested will.
It also provoked strong opposition from the organized bar as well as hospice and psychiatric groups, which argued that watering down the eternality of the attorney-client privilege beyond existing exceptions, say for contested wills, would destroy the basic trust the privilege is meant to encourage.
Challenges Grew Steadily The experts say the exact number of cases is impossible to pinpoint because probate courts do not keep track of contested wills by cause of death and because acquired immune deficiency syndrome is sometimes omitted from death certificates.
Early on, detectives said they were looking at cases that Mr. Silver, a probate and real estate lawyer, had been involved in, including a dispute with a tenant in a building he owned, and a case of a bitterly contested will in which he served as a lawyer.