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25 May 1808 Ch. 4
Ch. 4. Features essential and peculiar to Jury trial —
their utility.
In considering estimating the effects of Jury trial as practiced
in England, and thus with a view to such applications of it
as may be beneficial to the state of procedure in Scotland .
the elements first to be considered are those
which are appear present themselves as being not only
essential to this institution, but in common with to any
other: being such as could not be communicated to
any judicatory without bringing it to the nature of this
judicatory here in question.
Of these elementary factors the first that presents itself
is the imper inex impermanence which is as much as
to say the inexperience of the number of clerks thus
part of the judicatory as composed.
In the last preceding chapter +, + Ch 3 Essential and prudent uses
Jury trial taken in the
single was stated as an institution, forming constituting an essential
part of the English constitution: a part which could
not be separated from it, without having it to be gradually
assimilated to the general Rule of the European Monarchies. of.
Identifier: | JB/035/133/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 35.
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constitutional code; evidence; procedure code |
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ch. 4 / features essential and peculiar to jury trial - their utility |
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