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1826. April 24.
Penal Code
Ch.1. Offences affecting person
§. 1. Simple corporal vexation
Exposition
Expositive
Qu. which?
(a)(Justificative Cause) See B.I.Ch. Justifications.
☞ If on examination any justifications shall be found
applying peculiarly to this case, add them here.
4th June 1824. Add under the head of this offence all the justifications that apply to it, and refer to
this head for all justifications applying
to the several offences affecting
person.
(b.)(unlawful benefit) Examples. 1. Carrying on of
some unwholesome or annoying trade or other occupation.
For the list of the several trades and occupations
liable, according to circumstances, to become
unwholesome or annoying, and as such prohibited
or regulated, as well as for the several sets of
circumstances by which they are respectively in
vested with that character, and as such subjected
to prohibition, constraint or restriction, see the several Particular
Codes denominated from the several descriptions
of persons by whom those trades or occupations are
respectively carried on. The collection of these several
Codes will form a sort of Appendix to the General
Penal Code
(c.)(physical force) as if the wrongee be held fast
by the wronger, or an accomplice of his, while the wrongee
is subjected to the species of corporal vexation produced
or intended.
(d.)(Intimidation) as if by threat and fear of greatermore afflictive wrong in some other shape
evil, the wrongee is induced to submit to the species
of corporal vexation produced or intended.
(e.)(Wrongful remuneration) Case 1. the person by
whose act the pain or uneasiness is in an immediate
way produced, not the person with whom the of
fence originated, but an accomplice engaged as such
by money or benefit in any other shape, delivered before
the deed, on a promise of delivering it thereafter.
Case 2. By reward or promise of reward, added to deceptions
practice, the wrongee himself is induced to exercise some act
of which corporal vexation in the shape intended is by
him (the wrongee) unexpected by but by the wronger the
intended and expected consequences.
(f.) Deceptions practice
to wit.
1. False declaration extrajudicial
2. False declaration judicial
3. Forgery
4. Personation
5. Suppression of evidence
as to wrongdoing in those several shapes see
See B1.Ch. Instruments
of Delinquency
Identifier: | JB/067/194/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 67.
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067 |
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194 |
penal code |
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001 |
exposition / expositive |
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copy/fair copy sheet |
1 |
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recto |
e3 |
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john flowerdew colls |
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22027 |
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