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1828 Aug. 12
Blackstone
8. Modes of eliciting evidence accordingly, three:
from beginning to end of each suit, the one or the other to be
employed according as they may respectively
be in the largest degree conducive to correctness and compleatness of information,
and minimization† of delay, vexation expence and vexation.
† Minimization – or say reduction to a minimum – to the lowest
smallest amount possible.
1. Oral or say word of mouth or say oral mode, at the
originally addressed judicatory: 2. Oral mode, at a subsequentially
addressed Judicatory: 3. Epistolary mode, by
written sets of questions or say interrogatories, transmitted
from either Judicatory.
9. Causes for the employment of the epistolary mode.
1. In the individual suit in question the information needed, of simple to such a degree, in
that in the individual suit in no need of cross-examination
or say counter-interrogation orally administered, can so far as appears have place.
2. At the time in question, the abode of The individual to be examined – say the examinee
not within the jurisdiction of the judicatory: say, in Scotland
Ireland, in Scotland, in any one of the foreign dependencies, or
in the dominions of a foreign power.
☞ Here bring to view of the inadequacy and expensiveness of the
mode of eliciting by under Law as it is.
Identifier: | JB/031/173/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 31.
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1828-08-12 |
not numbered |
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031 |
civil code |
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173 |
blackstone |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
e5 |
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jeremy bentham |
b&m 1828 |
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arthur moore; richard doane |
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1828 |
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9859 |
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