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C Composition and Promulgation
from vague report or from the representation of the
Judge. As the Judges or the persons of all persons in authority those only any to whose notice
the exigences resulting from such incidents are surely present
themselves, so are the person who are most likely
to understand best what regulations will the most
proper to make provision for those exigencies. It is from
the Judges there The Legislator therefore would To
all Judges therefore a power ought to be given
of proposing regulations of Procedure.
But to no Judge nor to any Court ought to have
1- On account of
Subordination the power to be committed of giving a definitive
authority to any permanent such regulations, any
more than to any other regulations of a general
and permanent nature. It would at any rate be an
encroachingment upon the province of the Legislator, and it might be employed in the
subversion of the counteracting his authority. of the Legislator. Thus By requiring,
for instance more witnesses than they can
well be likely furnish, or by admitting of delay after delay,
or by heaping expence upon expence, a Judge Court
might of Justice might render any or act unpunishable
which the Legislator had thought proper to constitute
an offence.
Identifier: | JB/100/092/002 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 100.
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conservation and improvement |
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text sheet |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::gr [crown motif]]] |
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32108 |
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