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<note>Tit. II</note><lb/>man denies himelf: <add><del>ano</del> a second sends excuses: a third man</add> another man, as he can't do business<lb/>at home <add>chooses rather to go</add> goes about some business <del>of his</del> he has of his<lb/>own abroad, than <del>abo</del> to sit like a cypher by the side<lb/>of the Judge<hi rend='superscript'>+</hi>. <del>This often <gap/></del> Messages pass backwards<lb/><note><hi rend='superscript'>+</hi>A third sends excuses.<lb/>A fourth says that<lb/>as he is not among<lb/><gap/>, it is no<lb/>business of his to go.<lb/>Oftentimes it will be<lb/>really doubtful which<lb/>is nearest: and if<lb/>one of the two that are<lb/>nearest is really in-<lb/>capable of attending<lb/>there is <gap/> provision<lb/>him for obliging ano-<lb/>-ther to tke his place<lb/>A <del>backward</del> defendant<lb/>in debt will give<lb/>warning to one of<lb/><del>the nearest</del> <add>two</add> Good-<lb/>men-and-true, and<lb/>both will find their<lb/>account in the intelli-<lb/>gence.</note><lb/>and forwards, and still the number is not compleated.<lb/>Hour after hour day after day is lost in this way: <del>the</del> Judge<lb/>parties and witnesses waiting all the while and nothing<lb/>done. It is difficult enough to get a defendant to<lb/>attend or an unwilling witness: to this difficulty is<lb/><gap/> added that of getting two unwillingJudges.<lb/><lb/>The Judge is liable to be turned out every two<lb/>years. If the salary is our object, and he has to trust<lb/>to it for a lively being <add>maintenance</add>, the <del>may <gap/></del> precarious<lb/>-ness of the situation may render it difficult to find<lb/>a proper man to fill it. He must be a man of a<lb/>liberal education, and <del>not</del> at least not altogether unac-<lb/><note>5<lb/>Judge - the pre-<lb/>-cariousness of<lb/>his situation ob-<lb/>-jected to.</note><lb/> quainted with the law. <add><del>The</del></add> An Advocate, an Attorney<lb/>or a Notary according to the present system. How<lb/>can such a man quit his <del>prof</del> <add>profession</add> practice for a<lb/>salary which may cease at the end of two years,<lb/>when his clients have formed other connections? If<lb/>the Judge is to be <del><gap/></del> kept in this station of dependence<lb/>by frequent elections, perhaps the stability of the office might
<note>Tit. III</note><lb/>man denies himelf: <add><del>ano</del> a second sends excuses: a third man</add> another man, as he can't do business<lb/>at home <add>chooses rather to go</add> goes about some business <del>of his</del> he has of his<lb/>own abroad, than <del>abo</del> to sit like a cypher by the side<lb/>of the Judge<hi rend='superscript'>+</hi>. <del>This often <gap/></del> Messages pass backwards<lb/><note><hi rend='superscript'>+</hi>A third sends excuses.<lb/>A fourth says that<lb/>as he is not among<lb/><gap/>, it is no<lb/>business of his to go.<lb/>Oftentimes it will be<lb/>really doubtful which<lb/>is nearest: and if<lb/>one of the two that are<lb/>nearest is really in-<lb/>capable of attending<lb/>there is <gap/> provision<lb/>him for obliging ano-<lb/>-ther to tke his place<lb/>A <del>backward</del> defendant<lb/>in debt will give<lb/>warning to one of<lb/><del>the nearest</del> <add>two</add> Good-<lb/>men-and-true, and<lb/>both will find their<lb/>account in the intelli-<lb/>gence.</note><lb/>and forwards, and still the number is not compleated.<lb/>Hour after hour day after day is lost in this way: <del>the</del> Judge<lb/>parties and witnesses waiting all the while and nothing<lb/>done. It is difficult enough to get a defendant to<lb/>attend or an unwilling witness: to this difficulty is<lb/><gap/> added that of getting two unwillingJudges.<lb/><lb/>The Judge is liable to be turned out every two<lb/>years. If the salary is our object, and he has to trust<lb/>to it for a lively being <add>maintenance</add>, the <del>may <gap/></del> precarious<lb/>-ness of the situation may render it difficult to find<lb/>a proper man to fill it. He must be a man of a<lb/>liberal education, and <del>not</del> at least not altogether unac-<lb/><note>5<lb/>Judge - the pre-<lb/>-cariousness of<lb/>his situation ob-<lb/>-jected to.</note><lb/> quainted with the law. <add><del>The</del></add> An Advocate, an Attorney<lb/>or a Notary according to the present system. How<lb/>can such a man quit his <del>prof</del> <add>profession</add> practice for a<lb/>salary which may cease at the end of two years,<lb/>when his clients have formed other connections? If<lb/>the Judge is to be <del><gap/></del> kept in this station of dependence<lb/>by frequent elections, perhaps the stability of the office might





Revision as of 17:49, 5 July 2012

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Tit. III
man denies himelf: ano a second sends excuses: a third man another man, as he can't do business
at home chooses rather to go goes about some business of his he has of his
own abroad, than abo to sit like a cypher by the side
of the Judge+. This often Messages pass backwards
+A third sends excuses.
A fourth says that
as he is not among
, it is no
business of his to go.
Oftentimes it will be
really doubtful which
is nearest: and if
one of the two that are
nearest is really in-
capable of attending
there is provision
him for obliging ano-
-ther to tke his place
A backward defendant
in debt will give
warning to one of
the nearest two Good-
men-and-true, and
both will find their
account in the intelli-
gence.

and forwards, and still the number is not compleated.
Hour after hour day after day is lost in this way: the Judge
parties and witnesses waiting all the while and nothing
done. It is difficult enough to get a defendant to
attend or an unwilling witness: to this difficulty is
added that of getting two unwillingJudges.

The Judge is liable to be turned out every two
years. If the salary is our object, and he has to trust
to it for a lively being maintenance, the may precarious
-ness of the situation may render it difficult to find
a proper man to fill it. He must be a man of a
liberal education, and not at least not altogether unac-
5
Judge - the pre-
-cariousness of
his situation ob-
-jected to.

quainted with the law. The An Advocate, an Attorney
or a Notary according to the present system. How
can such a man quit his prof profession practice for a
salary which may cease at the end of two years,
when his clients have formed other connections? If
the Judge is to be kept in this station of dependence
by frequent elections, perhaps the stability of the office might




Identifier: | JB/051/237/003"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 51.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

4-5

Box

051

Main Headings

evidence; procedure code

Folio number

237

Info in main headings field

Image

003

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

4

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f5 / f6 / f7 / f8

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

[[watermarks::l munn [britannia with shield emblem]]]

Marginals

jeremy bentham

Paper Producer

benjamin constant

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

16402

Box Contents

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