★ 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
1810
Misdecision as ever is evil opposite to every an ends
of justice. Equals no object to add the natural mode;
the addition adds to lawyers profit.
The several possible ways of receiving and collecting
evidence may be all reduced referred to one or other
principal modes, viz.
natural and colloquial mode, in which the person under examination
whether per extraneous witness or party is heard or
on his own side and cross examined in the
other side, the Judge also putting occasionally such questions
as he thinks fit.
natural mode There is the mode pursued in Jury trial, in causes
commonly by a Justice of the Peace in examination
either House of Parliament, and in general where in all
in which truth and justice have are really the objects
aimed at. Questions arising out of answers Succeeding questions are grounded deduced within
from the answers extracted by preceding ones.
The evidence thus received and collected by or in presence of the
Judges by whom the decision grounded on it is to be framed.
The natural epistolary mode The Roman secret mode, by Judges one or more divers receiving and extracting nominal
one or more on each side direction none but
are in a string of interrogations
by some person in whose situation to whom is is not possible any such foresight in
the answers that will be returned to them is not
.
The Roman secret mode by a single receiving
extracting Judge
The mode by affidavit on both sides: not a
as put by any body on either side or by any
.
Identifier: | JB/547/140/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 547.
|
|||
---|---|---|---|
1810-12-09 |
|||
547 |
|||
140 |
Prizes |
||
001 |
|||
Text sheet |
|||
Jeremy Bentham |
|||