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JB/042/497/001

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1825 Dec. 1 1831 June 9
Constitutional Code

+ + 13
Copied Ch. XII Judiciary collectively
(2) (2 § 25 Attendance
instructions

49 or 4
Appointed service
determ hour of
commencement determined
by Judges
special order

Expositive

Art. 49 4 By appointed duty or duty say service understand that which is pr
performed during a portion of the day, the commencement of
which is determined by a special new order ordinance of the Judge.
To this head will In this way, will be distinguished marked out whatsoever
time is pr employed, or to be employed in hearings with a Quasi
Jury
: and on each individual occasion, or by a general rule, for the commencement of such service, that head time,
hour and minute may be, and of course naturally will be, so marked out, which is regarded
as most consistent with general convenience.

50 or 5
For Casual service sitting
at all times previous
& subsequent to
appointed service

Instructional

Art. 50. 5 As on these occasions so on all other occasions, —
for business cases which is no are not regarded as cases of non
urgency
urgency such hours of communication will in every political
state and may in any judicial territory in the state
be appointed as are regarded as most consistent with
general convenience, having for sitting in casual cases, all
hours antecedent and subsequent to those employed in these
appointed sittings.

51 or 6
During a portion of
the year there may be
no casual case in the
time left for casual
service but attendance
on the part of Judge
no hardship

Instructional

Art. 51. 6 During a proportion of the year more or less consistently considerable —
it may happen in the Judicatory, be it what it may, that on this or that day an no
a casual case shall take place, during the time, left as it were
vacant for the reception if of such casual cases. [+] [+] and, whatsoever and, whatsoever may
be the amount of the
total quantity of time
thus then left unemployed
in actual service
the obligation of being
so in attendance for
and during that same
quantity of time, may
at first view be apt to present in the mind of the reader the value of hardship, as resulting from the imposition of this obligation on the Judge
But, by the obligation [+] [+]so long as a sufficient
number of relaxation
days are allowed,

of attendance at those times, no hardship is imposed on further consideration, nothing of hardship (it will be seen) has
on the Judge place. So as he is but on the spot, the Judge will occupy himself
in the manner most agreeable and convenient to himself;
and thus it is — that, so far from being worse less eligible his condition will
be better more eligible, than that of a person whose time of labour is in coincides with and occupies
the whole of his time of attendance.




Identifier: | JB/042/497/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 42.

Date_1

1825-12-01

Marginal Summary Numbering

4-6

Box

042

Main Headings

constitutional code

Folio number

497

Info in main headings field

constitutional code

Image

001

Titles

expositive / instructional

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

c2 / d13 / e2

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

"copd"

ID Number

13420

Box Contents

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