★ Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
<!-- margin paragraph notes are in pencil --> <head> Maxim Simplicity Expedition Procedure</head> <p><note>13<lb/> <gap/> even of the<lb/>cases.</note></p> <p>Whether a course shall require a longer or a<lb/> shorter time depends not <del>on</del> upon the <add>any</add> general<lb/> denomination or class of causes it can be ranked<lb/>under so much as the particular circumstances<lb/> <note>were <add>even</add> the classes as <add>well &</add> naturally<lb/> | <!-- margin paragraph notes are in pencil --> <head> Maxim Simplicity Expedition Procedure</head> <p><note>13<lb/> <gap/> even of the<lb/>cases.</note></p> <p>Whether a course shall require a longer or a<lb/> shorter time depends not <del>on</del> upon the <add>any</add> general<lb/> denomination or class of causes it can be ranked<lb/>under so much as the particular circumstances<lb/> <note>were <add>even</add> the classes as <add>well &</add> naturally<lb/> composed as under<lb/> the English law they are<lb/>otherwise</note><lb/> of the case: all that can be said in this respect<lb/> of this or that <add>such or such a</add> class, is that a cause belonging<lb/> to that class is more or less likely to take up<lb/> much or little time than a cause belonging<lb/> to such or such another.</p> <p><note>14<lb/> A cause that might<lb/> be carried on primarily<lb/> in a lower<lb/> court might <foreign><hi rend="underline">a <unclear>fortiori</unclear></hi></foreign><lb/> in a higher</note></p> <p>If a cause can, consistently with the<lb/> purposes of justice be carried on in a summary<lb/> way in a lower Court, much more might<lb/> it in a higher; where the Judge is by the supposition<lb/> the Judge is more trustworthy and <lb/> where <add>in whose hands</add> any extraordinary powers if extraordinary<lb/> powers were necessary might be lodged<lb/> with less danger</p> <p><note>15<lb/>In the English Law<lb/> the least trustworthy<lb/> courts have been entrusted<lb/> with the greatest <add>most</add><lb/><add>arbitrary</add> powers</note></p> <p><del>To</del> In the English legislation, the <del>cases</del> <add> Court</add><lb/> in <add>to</add> which summary powers have been entrusted are<lb/> those which besides being of the lowest order <del>have</del><lb/> are entrusted with the narrowest jurisdiction, and<lb/> therefore have the least to do: those to which it has<lb/> been refused are those which besides being of the<lb/> highest order have the widest jurisdiction, and thereby<lb/> the <del><gap/></del> most to do: so that <add>and</add> the more business they<lb/> have to go through the longer they have been obliged<lb/> to be about it.</p> | ||
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
Maxim Simplicity Expedition Procedure
13
even of the
cases.
Whether a course shall require a longer or a
shorter time depends not on upon the any general
denomination or class of causes it can be ranked
under so much as the particular circumstances
were even the classes as well & naturally
composed as under
the English law they are
otherwise
of the case: all that can be said in this respect
of this or that such or such a class, is that a cause belonging
to that class is more or less likely to take up
much or little time than a cause belonging
to such or such another.
14
A cause that might
be carried on primarily
in a lower
court might a fortiori
in a higher
If a cause can, consistently with the
purposes of justice be carried on in a summary
way in a lower Court, much more might
it in a higher; where the Judge is by the supposition
the Judge is more trustworthy and
where in whose hands any extraordinary powers if extraordinary
powers were necessary might be lodged
with less danger
15
In the English Law
the least trustworthy
courts have been entrusted
with the greatest most
arbitrary powers
To In the English legislation, the cases Court
in to which summary powers have been entrusted are
those which besides being of the lowest order have
are entrusted with the narrowest jurisdiction, and
therefore have the least to do: those to which it has
been refused are those which besides being of the
highest order have the widest jurisdiction, and thereby
the most to do: so that and the more business they
have to go through the longer they have been obliged
to be about it.
Identifier: | JB/057/007/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 57. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
13-17 |
|||
057 |
procedure code |
||
007 |
procedure |
||
001 |
|||
text sheet |
4 |
||
recto |
f5 / f6 / f7 / f8 |
||
jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [lion with crown motif]]] |
||
18337 |
|||