★ Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts
Auto upload |
No edit summary |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
<head>1823 <sic>Nov.</sic> 2<lb/>Constitutional Code or Procedure</head> <!-- in pencil --> <p><note>III<lb/><sic>Ch</sic> Ends of Judicature</note><lb/>(3 <note>§ Means, practice<lb/><foreign>Anglicé</foreign></note></p> <p>Having for its purpose each of them the obtaining in<lb/><del><gap/> <gap/></del> the greatest possible number the obtaining customers<lb/>for <del>such</del> the commodity which <add>in different forms</add> under the name<lb/>of justice they hard to sell to such as could afford to purchase<lb/>it, the two sets of Judges <del>pursued</del> <add>in pursuit of</add> this same end<lb/>employed different means in a <add>somewhat</add> certain sort different.</p> <p>1. The <del><gap/></del> <add>The <unclear>way</unclear> pursued by Judges</add> whose Judicatories were called<lb/>Common Law Courts was <del>to throw</del> in the first place<lb/>to throw the doors wide open to all who <add>whosoever</add> chose to<lb/>inflict vexation in this shape to those towards whom<lb/>they thus acted the part of <unclear>insurers</unclear>: <del>putting this</del> by<lb/>the power of <del><gap/></del> <add><unclear>damnification</unclear></add> this led to them putting arms<lb/>into their hands <del>would</del> without requiring any appearance<lb/>whatsoever of their entertaining so much as a belief well<lb/>or ill grounded of their having right on their side. <!-- brackets in pencil --> [As<lb/>well might the Judge been stationed himself <add>in a public street</add> at the foot<lb/>of a bridge <del>offering</del> with a club in his hand offering it<lb/>to any one who had a fancy to employ it in breaking<lb/>the head or windows of any one with whom he had a<lb/>dispute.]</p> <p>Of these Judicatories there grew up at an early period<lb/> three in number <add>the Kings Bench Court the Common Pleas Court and the Exchequer Court</add> each having cognizance given them of<lb/>those different sorts of demands: the Kings Bench having<lb/>cognizance of <add><gap/> such</add> demands in the sense of wrongs not considered<lb/>as <del>p</del> criminal, and the Exchequer Court of demands<lb/>of money made upon individuals on the score of<lb/>its being due to Government.</p> | |||
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{ | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
1823 Nov. 2
Constitutional Code or Procedure
III
Ch Ends of Judicature
(3 § Means, practice
Anglicé
Having for its purpose each of them the obtaining in
the greatest possible number the obtaining customers
for such the commodity which in different forms under the name
of justice they hard to sell to such as could afford to purchase
it, the two sets of Judges pursued in pursuit of this same end
employed different means in a somewhat certain sort different.
1. The The way pursued by Judges whose Judicatories were called
Common Law Courts was to throw in the first place
to throw the doors wide open to all who whosoever chose to
inflict vexation in this shape to those towards whom
they thus acted the part of insurers: putting this by
the power of damnification this led to them putting arms
into their hands would without requiring any appearance
whatsoever of their entertaining so much as a belief well
or ill grounded of their having right on their side. [As
well might the Judge been stationed himself in a public street at the foot
of a bridge offering with a club in his hand offering it
to any one who had a fancy to employ it in breaking
the head or windows of any one with whom he had a
dispute.]
Of these Judicatories there grew up at an early period
three in number the Kings Bench Court the Common Pleas Court and the Exchequer Court each having cognizance given them of
those different sorts of demands: the Kings Bench having
cognizance of such demands in the sense of wrongs not considered
as p criminal, and the Exchequer Court of demands
of money made upon individuals on the score of
its being due to Government.
Identifier: | JB/055/017/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 55. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
1823-11-04 |
|||
055 |
Constitutional Code; Procedure Code |
||
017 |
Constitut. Code or Procedure |
||
001 |
|||
Text sheet |
1 |
||
recto |
E3 |
||
17738 |
|||