xml:lang="en" lang="en" dir="ltr">

Transcribe Bentham: A Collaborative Initiative

From Transcribe Bentham: Transcription Desk

Keep up to date with the latest news - subscribe to the Transcribe Bentham newsletter; Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts

JB/041/017/001

Jump to: navigation, search
Completed

'Click Here To Edit

1823. Octr. 14. 1825 Nov. 21
Constitutional Code
1827 Nov. 20
1826 Nov. 5. Copied and Copy Corrected.
Ch. XI Judiciary collectively Ch. XIII Immediate Judges.
§. 22 Outdoor attendance
§. 3.

§. 2 Outdoor Attendance Duty

Art. 3. In a case in which it will be conducive
to rectitude of decision that this advantage should be
endeavoured to be obtained, performance of the business
at the judgment seat would be either physically
impracticable, or not practicable without preponderant
inconvenience in some other shape.

Art. 4. A subject of visitation in this case will
be either a person or a thing: if a thing, a thing immoveable,
or a thing moveable.

Art. 5. I. Subject of visitation, a person. Of the purposes
for which, for avoidance of preponderant inconvenience,
it may be necessary that the Judge
should move to the person and not the person
to the Judge, examples are as follows.

1. The testimony of the person necessary to rectitude
of decision, and the person not capable of being
brought to the Judicatory without danger to life,
or danger of serious and lasting evil to health: as
where for the conviction of a murderer or intended murderer, necessity has
place for the extraction elicitation of testimony from the lips
of an expiring party the wounded party a person wounded.

2. A course of criminal maleficence, in which
divers persons are engaged, is going on, and the probability,
as supposed, of giving termination to it will at
least delay and expence, by bringing or endeavouring to bring
the malefactors to the judgment seat, is not so great,
as it will be, if the Judge, either in person, or by some
apt depute, repairs to the spot.

Art. 5. Subject of inspection a thing immoveable. Of Art 5. Of the which the incapable of being
the purposes for which it may be necessary that some person,
and for rectitude of decision most desirable, that the
Judge inspection of the thing, examples are as
follows
Of the subject matter or say object of inspection being, in all these cases a thing immoveable, examples are as follows.

1. Boundaries between the property of one man person and
that of another are to be ascertained or settled adjusted.

2. persons, two or more, of a piece of
land is
For the purpose of a of compensation, the
amount of damage produced on the a certain spot by physical or
human agency is to be ascertained.

3. The question, whether a contract of which a certain spot has
been the subject, has, or
has not been, duly performed,
is to be determined. Art. 6.


Identifier: | JB/041/017/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 41.

Date_1

1823-10-14

Marginal Summary Numbering

6

Box

041

Main Headings

Constitutional Code

Folio number

017

Info in main headings field

Constitutional Code

Image

001

Titles

Category

Copy/fair copy sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

"Recto" is not in the list (recto, verso) of allowed values for the "Rectoverso" property.

Page Numbering

D10 / E4

Penner

Watermarks

Marginals

Jeremy Bentham

Paper Producer

Corrections

Jeremy Bentham

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

[[notes_public::Copy corrected [note in Bentham's hand]]]

ID Number

001

Box Contents

UCL Home » Transcribe Bentham » Transcription Desk