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<head>1828 Sept. 10<lb/>Blackstone</head> <!-- in pencil --><p><note><sic>Ch.<sic> Judiciary [& Procedure]?</note><lb/>(13) 4 <note>Actors & Functionaries<lb/>II. <sic>Prehensors<lb/>Prehensable.</sic> Defendants <hi rend="underline">Yes</hi><lb/>Witnesses, <hi rend="underline">not</hi>.</note></p> <p><note>Thus it was convenient<lb/>that Defendants <sic>sh<hi rend="superscript">d</hi></sic> be<lb/>prehensible — not so<lb/>Witnesses.</note></p> <p>Thus it is, that to those by whom and of course for whom<lb/><del>laws</del> under Law as it is, laws are and ever have been<lb/>made it was convenient and <sic>agreable</sic> that Defendants <add>(proper exception excepted)</add><lb/>should be subjected to prehension; not so, that Witness<lb/>should.</p> <p><note>Prehension of consequence<lb/>as regards length of confinement,<lb/>which depends<lb/>on sort of judicatory or distance<lb/>of it &c. To deal with thus with<lb/>witnesses 'too bad' Noble & < | <head>1828 Sept. 10<lb/>Blackstone</head> <!-- in pencil --><p><note><sic>Ch.</sic> Judiciary [& Procedure]?</note><lb/>(13) 4 <note>Actors & Functionaries<lb/>II. <sic>Prehensors<lb/>Prehensable.</sic> Defendants <hi rend="underline">Yes</hi><lb/>Witnesses, <hi rend="underline">not</hi>.</note></p> <p><note>Thus it was convenient<lb/>that Defendants <sic>sh<hi rend="superscript">d</hi></sic> be<lb/>prehensible — not so<lb/>Witnesses.</note></p> <p>Thus it is, that to those by whom and of course for whom<lb/><del>laws</del> under Law as it is, laws are and ever have been<lb/>made it was convenient and <sic>agreable</sic> that Defendants <add>(proper exception excepted)</add><lb/>should be subjected to prehension; not so, that Witness<lb/>should.</p> <p><note>Prehension of consequence<lb/>as regards length of confinement,<lb/>which depends<lb/>on sort of judicatory or distance<lb/>of it &c. To deal with thus with<lb/>witnesses 'too bad' Noble & <sic>Rvd</sic><lb/>Lords &c.</note></p> <p>This difference would not have been so considerable —<lb/>no — nothing near so considerable were it not for the <add>grave</add> consequences<lb/>given to prehension — the consequence in respect of length of<lb/>confinement. <sic>Prehended</sic> for <del>ab</del> debt or peccadillo, debt or<lb/>no debt, peccadillo or no peccadillo a man remains <unclear>endurance</unclear><lb/><del>durance,</del> <add>for winter, for half a year or a whole one</add> <!-- brackets in pencil -->[according to circumstances which have nothing to do<lb/>with the matter] according as the judicatory <add>(the <hi rend="underline">Court</hi> says Law as it is)</add> is called by such or<lb/>such a name, or the scene of action was <add>lay</add> at this or that distance<lb/>from the metropolis — <!-- brackets in pencil --> [seat of <unclear>chosen</unclear> judicature.] So<lb/>far so good: men were used to it: higher orders, to act it<lb/><add>higher and</add> lower orders to suffer it: <add>thus far then</add> every thing was as it should be.<lb/>But witnesses — thus to deal with witnesses? that (as <add>a</add> Lord<lb/>Liverpool might have said) would have been too bad: <sic>Honorable</sic><lb/>Gentlemen, Noble Lords, Right Revered Lords, Most Revered<lb/>Lords — keep such men in a Jail for six months and twelve<lb/>months together, for nothing at all, at the pleasure of every Attorney<lb/>that can get a man to pay him for it? The very idea <add>imagination</add> of<lb/>such a thing is enough to <del><gap/></del> turn one giddy.</p> <p><note>Per unlearned, why not<lb/>take him before Judge instead<lb/>of jail or <sic>Spunging</sic> house<lb/>as is the case before a Justice</note></p> <p>Well but (says <add>say</add> our unlearned reader, and has been saying<lb/>so for these <add>some</add> several pages back — be the man a <del>defender</del> witness<lb/>be the man a defendant, keep him in jail for a twelve month<lb/>together without hearing him? what's the use of that tell<lb/>us, my Lord Judge — what's the use of that. When a<lb/>man is taken up whether it be to <add>make</add> answer to a demand, <del><gap/></del><lb/>made upon himself — whether it be to give evidence as to a demand<lb/>made upon another man, why can not he as well be <add>what, the reason he can not</add> <lb/><del>brought</del> taken <del>before</del> <add>to</add> your Lordship in Court, as to a Jailor, or<lb/>the Keeper of a <sic>Spunging</sic> House. Had the demand been made before a <add>Justice</add><lb/><!-- continues in the margin -->Justice of the Peace, the man <add>defendant</add><lb/>as soon as taken up, would<lb/> | ||
such a name, or the scene of action was <add>lay</add> at this or that distance<lb/>from the metropolis — <!-- brackets in pencil --> [seat of <unclear> | have been taken before the<lb/>Justice — sent to a Jail in<lb/>the first instance, or <del>to</del> in any<lb/>case to a <sic>Spunging</sic> House.</p> | ||
Liverpool might have said) would have been too bad: <sic>Honorable</sic><lb/>Gentlemen, Noble Lords, Right Revered Lords, Most Revered<lb/>Lords — keep such men in a Jail for six months and twelve<lb/>months together, for nothing at all, at the pleasure of every Attorney<lb/>that can get a man to pay him for it? The very idea <add>imagination</add> of<lb/>such a thing is enough to <del><gap/></del> turn one giddy.</p> | |||
<p>Well but (says <add>say</add> our unlearned reader, and has been saying<lb/> | |||
so for | |||
be the man a defendant, keep him in jail for a twelve month<lb/> | |||
together without hearing him? what's the use of that | |||
us, my Lord Judge | |||
man is taken up whether it be to <add>make</add> answer to a demand, <del><gap/></del><lb/> | |||
made upon himself | |||
made upon another man, <add>what, the reason he can not</add> | |||
<del>brought</del> taken <del>before</del> <add>to</add> your Lordship in Court, as to a Jailor, or<lb/> | |||
the Keeper of a Spunging House. Had the demand been made before a<lb/> | |||
Justice of the Peace, the man <add>defendant</add><lb/> | |||
as soon as taken up, would<lb/> | |||
have been taken before the<lb/ | |||
the first instance, or <del>to</del> in any<lb/> | |||
case to a Spunging House.</p> | |||
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{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{ | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
1828 Sept. 10
Blackstone
Ch. Judiciary [& Procedure]?
(13) 4 Actors & Functionaries
II. Prehensors
Prehensable. Defendants Yes
Witnesses, not.
Thus it was convenient
that Defendants shd be
prehensible — not so
Witnesses.
Thus it is, that to those by whom and of course for whom
laws under Law as it is, laws are and ever have been
made it was convenient and agreable that Defendants (proper exception excepted)
should be subjected to prehension; not so, that Witness
should.
Prehension of consequence
as regards length of confinement,
which depends
on sort of judicatory or distance
of it &c. To deal with thus with
witnesses 'too bad' Noble & Rvd
Lords &c.
This difference would not have been so considerable —
no — nothing near so considerable were it not for the grave consequences
given to prehension — the consequence in respect of length of
confinement. Prehended for ab debt or peccadillo, debt or
no debt, peccadillo or no peccadillo a man remains endurance
durance, for winter, for half a year or a whole one [according to circumstances which have nothing to do
with the matter] according as the judicatory (the Court says Law as it is) is called by such or
such a name, or the scene of action was lay at this or that distance
from the metropolis — [seat of chosen judicature.] So
far so good: men were used to it: higher orders, to act it
higher and lower orders to suffer it: thus far then every thing was as it should be.
But witnesses — thus to deal with witnesses? that (as a Lord
Liverpool might have said) would have been too bad: Honorable
Gentlemen, Noble Lords, Right Revered Lords, Most Revered
Lords — keep such men in a Jail for six months and twelve
months together, for nothing at all, at the pleasure of every Attorney
that can get a man to pay him for it? The very idea imagination of
such a thing is enough to turn one giddy.
Per unlearned, why not
take him before Judge instead
of jail or Spunging house
as is the case before a Justice
Well but (says say our unlearned reader, and has been saying
so for these some several pages back — be the man a defender witness
be the man a defendant, keep him in jail for a twelve month
together without hearing him? what's the use of that tell
us, my Lord Judge — what's the use of that. When a
man is taken up whether it be to make answer to a demand,
made upon himself — whether it be to give evidence as to a demand
made upon another man, why can not he as well be what, the reason he can not
brought taken before to your Lordship in Court, as to a Jailor, or
the Keeper of a Spunging House. Had the demand been made before a Justice
Justice of the Peace, the man defendant
as soon as taken up, would
have been taken before the
Justice — sent to a Jail in
the first instance, or to in any
case to a Spunging House.
Identifier: | JB/031/193/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 31. |
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1828-09-10 |
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031 |
civil code |
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193 |
blackstone |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
c13 / c4 |
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jeremy bentham |
b&m 1828 |
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arthur moore; richard doane |
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1828 |
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9879 |
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