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<head>28 Nov. 1810. <lb/>Prize</head> | |||
<note>16 <lb/>Ch.1. Beginning <lb/>5 <lb/>§. 4. III. Insufficiency <lb/>19 <lb/>11 <lb/>1. Expenses yielding <lb/>profit to Law Agents <lb/>are called Costs. <lb/>The costs to the payment <lb/>of which a <lb/>captor is exposed <lb/>are not <del>or</del> his <lb/>own only but <lb/>those of the claimant.</note> | |||
<p>1. Let us consider in the first place those expenses which<lb/>are sources of profit to law Agents: and which are <add>in their language are</add> commonly called <hi rend="underline">Costs</hi>.<lb/></p> | |||
<p>1. Under the name of costs <add>expense</add> must be comprehended not<lb/>only those expenses of suit which the captors or some<lb/>of them are obliged to advance out of their own pockets<lb/>before it can be certain <add>is ascertained</add> whether any money adequate<lb/>to the supply of the deficiency thus made will ever<lb/>come into their hands, but <add>moreover</add> in the event of an adverse<lb/>decision, the payment of a sum <add>sums</add> equal to the amount<lb/>of the <del>exp</del> money disbursed <add>on the other side</add> on the occasion of the suit<lb/>on the other side.<lb/></p> | |||
<note>12 <lb/>In each case to <lb/>a small mass of <lb/>natural and unavoidable <lb/>disbursements <lb/>are added <lb/>a vast mass of <lb/>factitious <del>and</del> avoidable <lb/>and unnecessary <lb/>ones imposed <lb/>for purposes <lb/>even adverse to those <lb/>of justice</note><lb/><p>And in each side to that <add>such</add> mass of expense which<lb/>is natural and unavoidable composed <add>in each instance</add> of disbursements<lb/>so circumstanced that without them grounds sufficient to<lb/>warrant a just decision can not be obtained <add>made</add> , are <add>is</add> <add>may be seen to be</add> added<lb/><del>other costs that are</del> an ulterior <add>and partly factitious</add> burthen, composed of<lb/>disbursements <del>not</del> none of them necessary nor contributing<lb/>any thing to rectitude of decision, but exacted of<lb/>the suitors on both sides, for purposes not conducive <add>widely different from</add><lb/>but <add>on the contrary</add> adverse to the purposes of justice.<lb/></p><pb/> | |||
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{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
28 Nov. 1810.
Prize
16
Ch.1. Beginning
5
§. 4. III. Insufficiency
19
11
1. Expenses yielding
profit to Law Agents
are called Costs.
The costs to the payment
of which a
captor is exposed
are not or his
own only but
those of the claimant.
1. Let us consider in the first place those expenses which
are sources of profit to law Agents: and which are in their language are commonly called Costs.
1. Under the name of costs expense must be comprehended not
only those expenses of suit which the captors or some
of them are obliged to advance out of their own pockets
before it can be certain is ascertained whether any money adequate
to the supply of the deficiency thus made will ever
come into their hands, but moreover in the event of an adverse
decision, the payment of a sum sums equal to the amount
of the exp money disbursed on the other side on the occasion of the suit
on the other side.
12
In each case to
a small mass of
natural and unavoidable
disbursements
are added
a vast mass of
factitious and avoidable
and unnecessary
ones imposed
for purposes
even adverse to those
of justice
And in each side to that such mass of expense which
is natural and unavoidable composed in each instance of disbursements
so circumstanced that without them grounds sufficient to
warrant a just decision can not be obtained made , are is may be seen to be added
other costs that are an ulterior and partly factitious burthen, composed of
disbursements not none of them necessary nor contributing
any thing to rectitude of decision, but exacted of
the suitors on both sides, for purposes not conducive widely different from
but on the contrary adverse to the purposes of justice.
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Identifier: | JB/547/019/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 547. |
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1810-11-28 |
11-12 |
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547 |
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019 |
Prizes |
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001 |
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Jeremy Bentham |
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