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Deontology Private
Benevolence
Justice
2
The provision made by those dictates to which
by the force of the legal sanction applies is in a high degree liable
to be imperfect and inadequate: in so far as
that provision is not condemned by the principle
of utility it belongs to the popular or moral
sanctions and for the most part the popular
or moral sanction is not ill disposed to supply
the deficiencies of the legal.
In relation to the point in question the dictates
of utility being supposed to be ascertained, the
following seem to be the points in which the provision
made by the legal sanction is liable to be inadequate:—
1. By the legal sanction, no provision at all made:
the legal sanction silent.
2. A provision made by the legal sanction but
that provision contrary to the dictates of utility.
3. By the legal sanction a provision supposed
to be made and that provision supposed to be not
contrary to the dictates of utility but the import of
it uncertain.
4. A Provision made and the Import of it not
regarded as uncertain but the carrying it into effect
rendered impracticable or more of less difficult
by imperfections in the system of procedure
That part which contains the rules of Evidence included.
5. The existence of doubts or difficulties respecting the
existence procurability, or import of evidence on the one side
or the other produced
by causes other
than the imperfection
of the law.
Identifier: | JB/014/107/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 14.
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deontology |
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107 |
deontology private |
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001 |
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copy/fair copy sheet |
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recto |
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john flowerdew colls |
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4870 |
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