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PIII
Ch. IV Prehensors
§. Preliminary Security.
or 1.
Before dismission
or transmission Judge
will ask of Prehendee
whether he has ground
of complaint against
prehensors, in respect
of the treatment in
the account of the prehension.
2.
On the same account,
any other person may
then attend and complain.
3.
For intoxication on
that occasion, Prehensor
is punishable
by reprimand, or otherwise,
independently
of damage done.
4.
Unless specially inhibited
by Judge, a person,
or by proxy any
person, at whose instance
the Mandate
was issued, may accompany
and in case
of need assist the
Prehensor. Prehensor's
case it will be that,
by such accompaniers,
neither obstruction
be offered to the proceeding,
nor needless vexation
inflicted on
Prehensee, or any other
person.
5.
Question. For a Prehensor
why provide
pension of retreat,
though none to a
Judge?
6.
Answer. Reasons.
1. Judge Principal never
being without a
Judge or Judges Depute
permanent and
occasional any insufficiency
on his
part, through infirmity
bodily or mental,
in proportion as it has
place, may at all times
receive from their attendance
an adequate
supply.
7.
2. In the case of a
Prehensor, no such
supply can have place:
at all times, whenever
employed in prehension,
his strength must
suffice for subduing
resistance: for never
can it be preascertained
that resistance
will not be made
8.
3. For accersition,
any degree of strength
sufficient for making
the journey will
suffice: and so long
as efficient prehensors
are at hand, no other
person will be employed
and paid for
accersition.
Identifier: | JB/052/099/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 52.
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1825-04-21 |
or 1, 2-8 |
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052 |
procedure code |
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099 |
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001 |
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marginal summary sheet |
1 |
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recto |
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john flowerdew colls |
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16772 |
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