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JB/081/237/001

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1829 May 26
Petitions

1o
Supplement

(1) (5 § 11. Elucidations
Reconciliative
II. Benefit II Opinion gratuitous

II. Benefit the second. Obtainment gratuitous From a more trustworthy source, and gratuitous of this sort
of Law. Opinion customarily sought with a view to eventual
commencement or defence of suits.

The Matter of the benefit thus conferred consists in the saving of
the expence delay and vexatious anxiety sustained by the
purchaser of the commodity sold in and by the Law Opinion
trade a trade the profit and loss of which bids as yet deficient hitherto
to the power of computation

Unfortunately No in England, in Denmark, or in any
other country no than from the appropriate number of the Attorneys Bill in the year in question could the annual amount of the money paid on this
score be ascertained obtained.

☞ Go on from 2o to shew how the advi Opinion is given. After do state
how much more effectively the benefit is produced by

As to the mode in which the opinion is formed and
delivered, it is this. No otherwise Whatsoever be the state
of things which it recom advises the two parties to consent,
join in consenting to, giving their consent to to no otherwise can it expect to obtain
such consent than by causing each of them to believe
either that if the suit be carried through the ordinary Court
be it will end in his obtaining better terms or that relatively
to his pecuniary means the expence of its being carried
through will be so great that it will have terms his ability
to go on with it will have ceased before he has been able
to obtain better terms. 1. To form adequate grounds respecting
the better terms goodness of the terms which a party will have obtained
at and by the conclusion of a suit or in other words
to form adequate grounds for the opinion what will be the Judge's
opinion at the conclusion of the suit. it therefore supposes
on the part of the giver of the opinion the same the possession of knowledge
as to what the law is. as no less consummate than effectual in that possessed
by the Judge himself: 2. To give adequately grounded well grounded advice
in respect of the ability of the suitor on either side
to obtain terms as good as or better than those in question, so
far as that ability depends upon the abovementioned expence
it is necessary that the learned adviser should himself be acquainted
with the probable and thence with the customary quantum
of that expence at every distinguishable stage of the procedure
of in the sort of suit in question that he may be able to communicate
information thereof to the suitor in question the information, from
which
which the suitor to by whose
idle state of his own finance he being the individual instance
is best knows
their ability as to the
carrying on of the suit
to that pitch may thus
judged of




Identifier: | JB/081/237/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 81.

Date_1

1829-05-26

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

081

Main Headings

petition for justice

Folio number

237

Info in main headings field

petitions

Image

001

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

c1 / d5

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

26024

Box Contents

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