★ 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
Ch. VI. Judicial Application
§.4 limitations Purposes
3 requireding applicat
2. (c) requiring do
3. Consultation do (5)
4. of to be execution requiring.
5. lawyer (3 private applic
6. Abuse having
application.
§.2. Application uncontentious for what purposes
§.2. Purposes for which
Art. 3. III III Purpose simply information. Purposes 1
Applicant In contemplation of a certain wrong or criminal
offence, or wrong from which he or some other individual, or the public at large has suffered damage, or regard of
Art 1. Purpose for which a non contentious
as he supposes, in doing or was in danger of receiving damage
application may be made are either 1 Simply informative
the applicant, desirous or content that pursued on the ground
2 populative thereof, be made by some one else, for
example by the constituted authorities, but not desirous to offici act
himself as Pursuer, II Purpose simply informative desires have
Art 2 * in which a information
to be admitted and so to deliver * information thereby relative: information that be to
some employable or simply indicative or both, as the case may be. Applicant in this
case an informant.
Application may be made
Purpose of the application affirmative giving to a wrong;
1. Applicant, an
1. Information given of a wrong by an individual
When such being the purpose, the evidence has accordingly
who regards himself as having suffered or been in
been received and extracted been elicited, the Judge proceeds as
of suffering damage for from it — but who notwithstanding
per Ch VIII: §. Proceeding on information.
does not perhaps demand to be admitted as
Art 4 If in contemplation of a an eventual suit non
person may on the ground of it either for the purpose of
information, is given to Enough regard to the ends of justice
punishment as for the purpose of satisfaction but leave
or to the welfare of a party supposed to be interested, is given
to the Judge and to the Government the charge of pursuit.
by an individual, who then must regard himself who has not as having himself
Applicant non informant
any special interest in such suit, the application is that of an uncommissioned proxy: as
to who, see Ch. §
Art.2 1 Purpose 2. No 2 Purpose the same as above, but the
2. Applicant an informant ,
Applicant not identified. By himself in particular no damage
particular damage no offence. In the damage produced
from the offence has on his own been received or is in danger or was
or probability by the offence, he himself be
in danger of being received. It is not therefore by the
special the interest of the public at large
desire to receive compensation or security for himself in particular
the only contract which by the information he seeks to serve
but by the desire of rendering service to the public, or by some other
matter that by in his instance the application has been produced.
(a) In English practice on both these grounds applications have
place every day in certain criminal cases. The pre cases are
really those in which the punishment per attached to the offence rises
to the height of what is so unintelligibly called felony. [+] [+]informant is frequently entrapped, and forced to become pursuer: and the judicatory that terminates the suit is a different from the one which has then commenced it. But if in a judicial
case of this sort the receipt of information in the the is capable of being of any use, so
it is in every other. Yet in no other case is there a Judge who will receive it.
The sort of Judge, by
whom in this case the
information is received is —
not the Judge, under whom
the suit will receive its
termination; but the sort of
Judge by which a sort of preliminary complaint and more conclusive enquire is carried on, to wit the Justice of Peace.
6
Art 6. 11 Purpose
simple information.
In contemplation of an
act from which damage
has accrued or is about
to accrue to himself, another
individual or the
public, a person that
deserves to become pursuer,
desires to give information
of it, that the
Judge may do in relation
to it what he deems fit:
Applicant in this case
an informant.
Judge, with a view to
the institution of a suit
proceeds therefore as
per Ch. VIII or XI. Proceedings
in information.
7
Art. 7. The suit being
of a sort in which an
individual is pursuer
the part thus acted by
the informant is that
of an uncommissioned
proxy as per Ch. VIII
§§. .
7 (a)
Anglicé, information
as thus described is received
but in general in no other case, than
those in which the punishment
received in the higher
unintelligibly call felony
and others so small that if in these cases the
receipt of information is of
use, to justice so in all other. In this case the [+] [+]informant is frequently entrapped, and forced to become pursuer: and the judicatory that terminates the suit is a different from the one which has then commenced it.
Identifier: | JB/052/283/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 52.
|
|||
---|---|---|---|
1825-01-16 |
6-7, 7a |
||
052 |
procedure code |
||
283 |
procedure code |
||
001 |
|||
text sheet |
1 |
||
recto |
e4 |
||
jeremy bentham |
j whatman turkey mill 1822 |
||
jonathan blenman |
|||
1822 |
|||
16956 |
|||