


However, a finding of unsupported means also that the division did not conclude that the allegation was without merit. Without merit, and in part due to the lack of research, the EA asserts that LNG by rail tank car will be safer than the existing LNG by tank truck. Victim" includes the Utah Office for Victims of Crime.(69) " Without merit" means the same as that term is defined in Section 62A-4a-101.Amended by Chapter 214, 2020 General Session, (Coordination Clause) Amended by Chapter 214, 2020 General SessionAmended by Chapter 312, 2020 General Session 78A-6-106 Search warrants and subpoenas - Authority to issue - Protective custody - Expedited hearing. The British Order of Merit, an award given to civilians and members of the armed forces, first appears in English in 1799, and is modeled on the Pour le Mérite established by King Frederick II (“Frederick the Great”) of Prussia in 1740.Without merit" means the same as that term is defined in Section 62A-4a-101. The legal term merits, i.e., “the intrinsic rights or wrongs of a case or matter, without consideration of procedural details, personal feelings, etc.,” dates from the end of the 15th century. The noun comes from Anglo-French and Old French merit(e) “reward, moral worth” and Latin meritum “what one deserves, due reward, justification,” a noun use of meritum, the past participle of the verb merēre (also merērī ) “to earn, receive as a reward.” The verb merit comes from Middle French mériter “to reward, deserve” and Latin meritāre “to bring in money (regularly), draw pay as a soldier, serve in the army.” The earliest English sense of the noun is religious and theological, “the quality of (a person or action) being entitled to a reward from God,” which will be familiar to anyone who attended parochial school. The noun merit first appears in English in the very early 13th century, and the verb much later, toward the end of the 15th century.
