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1828 Sept. 13 + + 4
Constitutional Code
Ch. XII. Judiciary collectively
§.2. Actors
4
Copd.
Instructional. Expositive
Art. 6. To the appropriate knowledge of the Judge if
service be rendered it is If it be in respect of his
appropriate knowledge, that service is tendered, or
offered and thereupon rendered, to the Judge, it is by information
given to him in relation to some matter of fact. Informant(a) or say Informer is the appellation, by which
in this case the Applicant may be, and accordingly is wont to be designated.
For the several purposes, for which such information may be
tendered and received, see Procedure Code title Applications
Note (a)
The word Informer
though in its original
signification exactly
equivalent to informant,
is by the
import which
has become attached
to it, been rendered with
reference to the purpose
here in hand, unfit
for use.
Instructional. Expositive
Art. 7. If a s for service in any shape, a
demand is made at the hands of a Judge as such,
it will be either at the charge or not at of some determinate
party, or not: at the charge of any determinate
party: if yes, it will have for its object purpose
the giving commencement to a suit at law
of say for shortness a suit:(a) if not, it will be for some
other purpose one or other of divers purposes, as to which
see below Art. and §.22. Judge's preinterpretative functions §.23.
Judge's non-litigational evidence elicitation functions: and
Procedure Code tit. Applications.
To p.6, paragraph 2.
a
See Note on the next page
Expositive
Art. 8. By a party
to a suit understand
a person, or persons in
any number, whose
station is on one and
the same side of it
Expositive
Art. 9. Sides in a
suit, two: — the Pursuer's,
and the Defendant's;
Pursuers, the party by
whom at the charge of
another a demand is
made: Defendant, a
party, at whose charge
a demand, having been
made, is by that same
party — resisted.
Expositive.
Art. 10. A suit is of two sorts: either ordinarily
or say compleatly a completely constituted, or extraordinarily suit, and an incompletely constituted
suit: a compleatly completely constituted suit that in which
completely, where there are on the two sides to it or say
on the two sides appear and act two individual parties as
who are opposed to one another there are two parties:
above; an incompletely constituted suit that in which
incompletely, where there being on one side there is one such party;
there is on the on the other side no such party — no person other than
the Judge Ordinary is the that is to say to the greatest extent exemplified is the case in which the suit is ordinar
completely constituted; extraordinary, that in which it
is incompletely constituted
Identifier: | JB/042/204/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 42.
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constitutional code |
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constitutional code |
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instructional expositive |
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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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"copd" |
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