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Ch. II Ends apt and inapt
§.
(1)
10
In England system of
procedure at no time
has been directed to the
ends of justice
Not only in country
In England not to speak of other countries, not
only at no time has the system of procedure rested
upon been in full directed to the ends of justice, but
at no time by any person concerned in the carrying it in has any such profession as that of its being
directed to the ends of justice been ever made. What
as he as on the whole are regarded as the ends: new
externally justiciable ends of judicature are less tended or
proper or improper to practice by which they are stated as
such as an altogether new one: the objects themselves are
novelties.
11
Sinister ends of judicature
alone aimed at
With what force indeed could they any such have been by
any English lawyer laid down as the proper ones
or so much as simply the proper ones, seeing that the
uniformly pursued by English judges, who (
and then the exception of a scrape pinch or two of legislator-made
law) have been at the same time this same legislator, are in a state
of perpetual opposition to those rules
12
absurdity of
books of practice
How it is that from beginning to end in English
book of procedure (Book of practice is the name
of such a book any English lawyer presents no other
object than a system of absurdity directed compleatly arbitrary to no
imaginable good end.
Identifier: | JB/052/176/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 52.
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1825-02-14 |
10-12 |
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052 |
procedure code |
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176 |
procedure code |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
c1 |
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jeremy bentham |
j whatman turkey mill 1824 |
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jonathan blenman |
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1824 |
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16849 |
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