When state law and federal law conflict, federal law displaces, or preempts, state law, due to the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution. ... Preemption applies regardless of whether the conflicting laws come from legislatures, courts, administrative agencies, or constitutions.
Answer:
False.
Explanation:
A contract can be defined as an agreement between two or more parties (group of people) which gives rise to a mutual legal obligation or enforceable by law.
There are different types of contract in business and these includes: fixed-price contract, cost-plus contract, bilateral contract, implies contract, unilateral contract, adhesion contract, unconscionable contract, option contract, express contract, executory contract, contract of sale, etc.
In South Africa, a contract of sale refers to an area of the legal which explicitly defines and establishes the rules that are applicable to the buying and selling of goods.
Basically, a contract of sale is considered to be valid if it is concluded by a simple agreement, a price is involved, and the thing to be sold is available and known to both the buyer and seller.
As a general rule, a seller doesn't have to be the owner of a thing or property being sold before the contract of sale is considered to be valid. Thus, a seller might be playing a fiduciary role on behalf of his or her principal who is the owner of a thing to be sold to a potential buyer.
Answer:
probative value
Explanation:
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides legal protection against search and seizure without good reason and without a search and seizure warrant. As we can see from the question above, Mick Stoner was charged with marijuana, which was taken from a legal dispensary in Denver, seized without a search warrant, so Mick Stoner's defense attorney disputes the evidential value of the evidence, claiming that the truck's initial search violated the Fourth Amendment.
To dispute the probative value of the evidence means that the evidence gathered, in this case, is not guaranteed, by itself, to support a condemnatory sentence, thus requiring the repetition in court of some of the evidence produced.