The Law Magazine and Law Review: Or, Quarterly Journal of Jurisprudence, Volume 23Butterworths, 1867 - Law |
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Page 2
... Parliament some of the greatest and most steady supports of the endangered rights and liberties of the people . The Cromptons descended from Puritans and Round- heads , men who , whatever the faults or narrowness of many amongst them ...
... Parliament some of the greatest and most steady supports of the endangered rights and liberties of the people . The Cromptons descended from Puritans and Round- heads , men who , whatever the faults or narrowness of many amongst them ...
Page 14
... Parliament . He possessed a competent knowledge of law , and was besides a clever well - informed man of the world . His invariable good - temper and courtesy made him a great favourite with all who practised at those sessions ...
... Parliament . He possessed a competent knowledge of law , and was besides a clever well - informed man of the world . His invariable good - temper and courtesy made him a great favourite with all who practised at those sessions ...
Page 24
... Parliament , and to seize hold of the right clue to its meaning ; and when he had been once engaged in causes of this character , his retention of that kind of business was certain . He was engaged in the various proceedings to which ...
... Parliament , and to seize hold of the right clue to its meaning ; and when he had been once engaged in causes of this character , his retention of that kind of business was certain . He was engaged in the various proceedings to which ...
Page 38
... Parliament , and where there are more than one by which the proceeding can be maintained , they will refer it to that which is most for the public advantage . These reasons , however , do not appear to Alison , P. C. L. , 245 . + Ibid ...
... Parliament , and where there are more than one by which the proceeding can be maintained , they will refer it to that which is most for the public advantage . These reasons , however , do not appear to Alison , P. C. L. , 245 . + Ibid ...
Page 51
... Parliament in 1856 , we recommended that every criminal court should be empowered to arraign any prisoner upon the bill of indictment before it was sent before the grand jury , and if he pleaded guilty , to sentence him accordingly . We ...
... Parliament in 1856 , we recommended that every criminal court should be empowered to arraign any prisoner upon the bill of indictment before it was sent before the grand jury , and if he pleaded guilty , to sentence him accordingly . We ...
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Popular passages
Page 221 - That the pretended power of dispensing with laws, or the execution of laws, by regal authority, as it hath been assumed and exercised of late, is illegal.
Page 135 - ... a counsel can maintain no action for his fees; which are given, not as locatio vel conductio, but as quiddam honorarium; not as a salary or hire, but as a mere gratuity, which a counsellor cannot demand without doing wrong to his reputation...
Page 211 - The discretion of a Judge is the law of tyrants; it is always unknown; it is different in different men; it is casual and depends upon constitution, temper and passion. In the best it is oftentimes caprice; in the worst it is every vice, folly and passion to which human nature is liable.
Page 38 - Names, nor for omitting to state the Time at which the Offence was committed, in any Case where Time is not of the Essence of the Offence, nor for stating the Time imperfectly, nor for stating the Offence to have been committed on a Day subsequent to the finding of the Indictment or...
Page 231 - Secondly, This indulged Law was only to extend to Members of the Army, or to those of the opposite Army, and never was so much indulged as intended to be (executed or) exercised upon others...
Page 231 - The necessity of order and discipline in an army is the only thing which can give it countenance; and therefore it ought not to be permitted in time of peace, when the king's courts are open for all persons to receive justice according to the laws of the land.
Page 313 - Provided always that the court shall not have cognizance of any action of ejectment, or in which the title to any corporeal or incorporeal hereditaments, or to any toll, fair, market, or franchise, shall be in question...
Page 284 - Ireland whereon may depend in any Degree the Allegiance of any Person to the Crown of the United Kingdom, or the Sovereignty or Dominion of the said Crown over any Part of the said Territories.
Page 30 - Society; being all to be used in evidence against both and each of you the said William Burke and Helen M'Dougal, at your trial, will, for that purpose, be in due time lodged in the hands of the clerk of the High Court...
Page 289 - I cannot see why one freeman should be used worse than another, merely upon account of his complexion.