| United States - Session laws - 1855 - 1306 pages
...hereby authorized to administer : " You, А. В., do solemnly swear (or affirm) that you will well and truly try, without prejudice or partiality, the case...now depending, according to the evidence which shall be adduced, the laws for the government of the navy, and your own conscience. So help you God." Recorder's... | |
| Courts-martial and courts of inquiry - 1947 - 718 pages
...First Lieutenant Forsythe Q. Hacker, and Lieutenant (jg) Moe Pfingston do swear thut you will well and truly try without prejudice or partiality the case...now depending, according to the evidence which shall be adduced, the laws for the government of the Navy, and your own conscience." Each member: "I do."... | |
| Isaac Maltby - Courts-martial and courts of inquiry - 2005 - 282 pages
...officiating as such, is hereby authorized to administer. You, A. B. do swear, that you will trul}*- try, without prejudice or partiality, the case now...court, the rules for the government of the navy, and your own conscience ; and that you will not by any means divulge or disclose the .sentence of the court,... | |
| Thomas Clark - 1814 - 264 pages
...which the judge advocate, or person officiating as such, is hereby authorised to administer. "I, A- B do swear or affirm, that I will truly try, without...according to the evidence which shall come before ihe court, the rules for the government of the navy, and my own conscience ; and that I will not by... | |
| United States - 1906 - 1146 pages
...a court-martial. On page 16 of Lauchheimer the oath appears as follows: You, AB , do swear that you will truly try, without prejudice or partiality, the...the evidence which shall come before the court— And that alone, if the court please, so far as evidence is concerned — the rules for the government... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Armed Services - 1949 - 1408 pages
...verdict of guilty, and to impose a particular sentence, regardless of the oath that it takes "to well and truly try, without prejudice or partiality, the case now depending, according to the evidence which *h»t be adduced, the laws for the government of the Navy, and your own conscience ' The result is... | |
| United States - 1912 - 790 pages
...and truly to try, without prejudice or partiality, the then depending case according to the evidence before the court, the rules for the government of the Navy and their own consciences, it appears to the department that this judicial determination properly warrants... | |
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