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Quotes About Verdict

Yes - this I hold to with devout insistence, Wisdom's last verdict goes to say: He only earns both freedom and existence Who must reconquer them each day.
~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Old age is the verdict of life.
~ Amelia Barr
Law is not justice and a trial is not a scientific inquiry into truth. A trial is the resolution of a dispute.
~ Edison Haines
Daniel had convicted them of false witness by their own mouth.
~ Anonymous
Res iudicata pro veritate habetur [A matter that has been legally decided is considered true].
~ Anonymous: Latin
Different days pass verdict on different men, and only the last day a final verdict on all men, and consequently no day is to be trusted.
~ Anthony Doerr
Pliny whispers in my ear, 'Different days pass verdict on different men and only the last day a final verdict on all men; and consequently no day is to be trusted.
~ Anthony Doerr
The people, the fans, the pundits, the people who watch on TV, they are the judges.
~ Dereck Chisora
I've forgotten to ask you what kind of acquittal you want. There are three possibilities: actual acquittal, apparent acquittal, and prolongation.
~ Franz Kafka
It's the right decision, Crawford.
~ Sandra Brown
I understand that it takes patience, but there are also positive signs. H. U. von Balthasar, the theologian who probably has the greatest influence in the Catholic world for the moment, has handed down a very positive verdict on my book. Likewise, K. Lehmann, who is the theologian of the German Bishops' Conference. So I think that your thinking will gradually prevail, even if there is resistance and difficulties for the moment.
~ Scott Cowdell
Amen"—so be it, there is nothing more to be said.
~ John Dunlop
My life has appeared unclothed in court, detail by detail, death-bone witness by death-bone witness, and I was shamed at the verdict.
~ Anne Sexton
The verdict you pronounce upon the source of your livelihood is the verdict you pronounce upon your life.
~ Ayn Rand
God has appointed that each human being should live one life, die one death and pass through one judgment for the life once lived. Therefore Jesus Christ also lived one life, died one death and God judged the life Christ had lived. Finding it pleasing in every respect, God certified his verdict by raising Christ from the dead. Because of Jesus' one life, one death and one judgment, God accepts the "many" who now eagerly wait for him to return bringing salvation. UNPACKING
~ Edward William Fudge
Decisions at the accurate and right time prove transparent justice; otherwise, it falls under the verdict as a conflict of interest if it delays without legitimate reasons.
~ Ehsan Sehgal
Every judicial verdict on whatever crime defines and describes the context and conception of the law and executes transparent justice accordingly. Whereas, the presiding judge and a panel of judges stay away from their personal feelings of perception, sympathy, anger, or revenge on any point and measure; otherwise, verdict falls under the failure of fair-decision and becomes morally and legally ineffective and invalid.
~ Ehsan Sehgal
None of the writings, one can exclude from the grammatical errors and mistakes; it means not a verdict, for disqualification since thought and vision of every writing subject prevail, not the grammar.
~ Ehsan Sehgal
The neutrality that compels to follow only particular guidelines and rules is a professional and dictatorial verdict, not according to the actual context of neutrality.
~ Ehsan Sehgal
Officialdom needs to put you in a categorizing box, and if it cannot then it is free to make its own verdict upon your status
~ Anthony Loyd
They've got him - credible witnesses, documents, heaven knows what else. In all my years as a prosecutor I have never seen such an open-and-shut case.
~ Elliot Richardson
You are not compelled to form any opinion about this matter before you, nor to disturb your peace of mind at all. Things in themselves have no power to extort a verdict from you.
~ Marcus Aurelius
Her guilt or innocence depends on whether the letters are true or false.
~ John Guy
Renard was obliged to report ruefully to his master that the laws of England were so unsatisfactory that it was impossible to have people executed unless they had previously been proved guilty.
~ John Julius Norwich