the judge ruled that the town's rescission of the contract was justified due the contractor's repeated failures to meet its obligations
Recent Examples on the WebRoberts said that, in assessing those arguments, a federal appeals court should have considered an October 2021 DHS memorandum that laid out a fuller explanation for the rescission of the program. Greg Stohr, Bloomberg.com, 30 June 2022 The majority said Texas and Missouri, the two states challenging the administration’s rescission of the program, can lodge additional arguments at the lower court level. Greg Stohr, Bloomberg.com, 30 June 2022 During his last year of dental school, the 2017 rescission of DACA went into effect, threatening Ramirez's citizenship status. Briana Alvarado, ABC News, 15 June 2022 Balsewicz's next regular parole hearing date, in January, is likely to occur before all the appeals in the current rescission are resolved. Bruce Vielmetti, Journal Sentinel, 10 June 2022 As time goes on and people forget about the rescission of offers, hiring managers may believe there were other factors that caused her not to be onboarded at Coinbase. Jack Kelly, Forbes, 3 June 2022 The lawsuit was already on schedule for an initial decision on a separate request to stop the rescission of Title 42 before May 23.al, 28 Apr. 2022 On Thursday, 18 states joined a lawsuit filed by Republican officials in Arizona, Louisiana and Missouri seeking to block Title 42's rescission. Camilo Montoya-galvez, CBS News, 15 Apr. 2022 The High Court last August upheld the injunction, citing its Regents decision blocking the Trump Administration’s DACA rescission. The Editorial Board, WSJ, 25 Apr. 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Middle French & Latin; Middle French rescision, borrowed from Latin rescissiōn- rescissiō, from *rescid-, variant stem of rescindere "to remove or lay bare by hewing and cutting, cancel, rescind" + -tiōn-, -tiō, suffix of verbal action