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<p>in which either at the outset, or at this or that time<lb/> thereafter, neither in the instance of both parties<lb/> nor even of <add>either</add> can the appearance in question have<lb/> place. For a time longer or shorter, by distance,<lb/> or by uniformity, bodily or mental, a party may<lb/> stand debarred altogether from making his<lb/> apperance before the Judge, or though appearing,<lb/> the aid of an apt assistant may be necessary<lb/> to him. When the party interested is a body<lb/> corporate, or other numerous class, composed of<lb/>
individuals assignable or <sic>unassignable</sic>. Of<lb/> agents and other trustees of all sorts the attendance<lb/> may, at the outset or at some later period,<lb/> be necessary, with or without that of their respective<lb/>parties.</p>
<p>But whatever be the best course, the<lb/> impracticability of it, in one instance, is it a<lb/> reason for not <sic>persuing</sic> it, at far as practicable,<lb/> in any other?</p>
<p>Under the system in its present state,<lb/>
certain sorts of <unclear>suits</unclear> there are, to which the exclusion<lb/>does not apply itself. What are they?<lb/>They are suits in which, if thus far justice were<lb/> not admitted, the exclusionists might themselves<lb/>be the sufferers: suits for murder, theft, robbery, house-breaking<lb/>and so forth. Judges, whether they have<lb/>bowels or no, have bodies. Judges have Houses</p><p>15</p><pb/>


<p>not less propriety, might it be called. <hi rend="underline">Ship-money</hi><lb/> produced its Hampden: the Hampden for <hi rend="underline">Justice-money</hi><lb/> is yet-to-seek.</p>
<p>Taxes, imposed on Suitors at the instance<lb/> of ministers, were bad enough, but they are not be a great<lb/> deal so bad as those imposed by Judges. Ministers can<lb/> not, without Parliament, give increase to taxes imposed<lb/> at their instance. Judges can, and do, give increase,<lb/> at pleasure, to taxes, imposed for their own emolument<lb/> by themselves.</p>


<p>Out of our torments they extract their own<lb/> comfort: and in <sic>they</sic> way in which they proceed, for<lb/> each particle of comfort extracted for themselves, they<lb/> of necessity, heap an immeasurable load of torment<lb/> upon us.</p>
<p>By every fee imposed, men, in countless multitude,<lb/> are for want of money to commence or carry<lb/> on suits, deprived of rights to any amount, and left to<lb/> suffer without redress wrongs to any amount: others,<lb/> made to suffer at the hands of Judges, for want of<lb/> the money necessary to enable them to defend themselves<lb/> against unjust suits.
</p>
<p>In all other cases, the presumption is-<lb/> that, if left to himself man will, upon each occasion, <lb/>sacrifice to his own, every other interest: and upon<lb/> this supposition are all laws grounded: what is</p>
<p>3.</p>


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in which either at the outset, or at this or that time
thereafter, neither in the instance of both parties
nor even of either can the appearance in question have
place. For a time longer or shorter, by distance,
or by uniformity, bodily or mental, a party may
stand debarred altogether from making his
apperance before the Judge, or though appearing,
the aid of an apt assistant may be necessary
to him. When the party interested is a body
corporate, or other numerous class, composed of
individuals assignable or unassignable. Of
agents and other trustees of all sorts the attendance
may, at the outset or at some later period,
be necessary, with or without that of their respective
parties.

But whatever be the best course, the
impracticability of it, in one instance, is it a
reason for not persuing it, at far as practicable,
in any other?

Under the system in its present state,
certain sorts of suits there are, to which the exclusion
does not apply itself. What are they?
They are suits in which, if thus far justice were
not admitted, the exclusionists might themselves
be the sufferers: suits for murder, theft, robbery, house-breaking
and so forth. Judges, whether they have
bowels or no, have bodies. Judges have Houses

15


---page break---

not less propriety, might it be called. Ship-money
produced its Hampden: the Hampden for Justice-money
is yet-to-seek.

Taxes, imposed on Suitors at the instance
of ministers, were bad enough, but they are not be a great
deal so bad as those imposed by Judges. Ministers can
not, without Parliament, give increase to taxes imposed
at their instance. Judges can, and do, give increase,
at pleasure, to taxes, imposed for their own emolument
by themselves.

Out of our torments they extract their own
comfort: and in they way in which they proceed, for
each particle of comfort extracted for themselves, they
of necessity, heap an immeasurable load of torment
upon us.

By every fee imposed, men, in countless multitude,
are for want of money to commence or carry
on suits, deprived of rights to any amount, and left to
suffer without redress wrongs to any amount: others,
made to suffer at the hands of Judges, for want of
the money necessary to enable them to defend themselves
against unjust suits.

In all other cases, the presumption is-
that, if left to himself man will, upon each occasion,
sacrifice to his own, every other interest: and upon
this supposition are all laws grounded: what is

3.



Identifier: | JB/081/173/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 81.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

081

Main Headings

petition for justice

Folio number

173

Info in main headings field

Image

001

Titles

Category

copy/fair copy sheet

Number of Pages

4

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

c3 / c4 / c13 / c14

Penner

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

richard doane

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

25960

Box Contents

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