JB/056/256/001: Difference between revisions

Transcribe Bentham: A Collaborative Initiative

From Transcribe Bentham: Transcription Desk

Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts

JB/056/256/001: Difference between revisions

BenthamBot (talk | contribs)
Auto upload
 
TB Editor (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE -->
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE -->


''This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet''
<head>1828 July 21 C1<lb/>Jud</head> <p><note>Judiciary<lb/>Multiplication of times<lb/>and places</note></p> <!-- pencil note --> <p>&#9758; Next to Written Pleadings now<lb/>Mendacity Securing</p> <p><note>37<lb/>Places &amp; times of hearing<lb/>multiplied</note></p> <p><add>A <del><gap/></del> <unclear>current</unclear> <gap/> to think of is &#x2014; how, <del>b</del><lb/>on the occasion of one and the same demand<lb/><sic>encrease</sic> is given to the number of the places in which this or that operation is performed in relation to it,<lb/>and thus at times to the<lb/>number of what <del>it at</del><lb/><sic>encrease</sic> is in like manner<lb/>given, without ease as also to the<lb/>distance between one of<lb/>those times and another</add><lb/><del>how as</del> places of hearing are multiplied, hours of hearing multiplied<lb/>and <unclear>thrown</unclear> at a distance from one another.</p> <p><note>38<lb/>demands made &amp; disposed<lb/>of before Justice of peace<lb/>stance: no reason why<lb/>demands in Superior Courts<lb/><sic>shd</sic> not be settled to example.</note></p> <p>First as to <del>multiplication of</del> the <sic>encrease</sic> given to the<lb/>number of the places.  When <del>in a</del> it is before a Justice of the<lb/>peace that the demand whatever it be is heard and disposed of,<lb/>if <del>all</del> the evidence <del>that</del> <add>which</add> the case has furnished is all of it in readiness,<lb/> <add>frequently as it happens</add> the demand is disposed of at one and the same time in<lb/>one and the same place at one and the same time: in the apartment<lb/>in which the <add>species of is</add> Judge, and frequently in the same hour or<lb/>even half hour or quarter of an hour in which the demand<lb/>is made.  Nor in by far the greater number of the cases in<lb/>which <del>the ab</del> it before the superior Courts that the demand must<lb/>be brought there is nothing in the nature of the case that affords<lb/>any the smallest objection to exactly the same unity of time<lb/>and place: witness ground of the demand, <add>money due for</add> goods sold and delivered:<lb/>money due for <del>work and</del> <add>so many days</add> labour performed: <!-- brackets in pencil --> [money due on an<lb/>account settled <add>in kind</add> the demand being the same <add><del>in kind</del></add> the ground of it<lb/>in point of law <del>the</del> and in point of fact the same, the evidence<lb/>by <add>on the ground of</add> which the demand is suspended or resisted being the same,<lb/>no more need is there of any additional time or place in the<lb/>case where the sum demanded is £10,000 than in the case where<lb/>it amounts to no more than 10<hi rend="superscript">s</hi>.]</p>
 
 


<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE -->
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE -->
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Untranscribed}}
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}}

Latest revision as of 11:10, 17 September 2025

Click Here To Edit

1828 July 21 C1
Jud

Judiciary
Multiplication of times
and places

☞ Next to Written Pleadings now
Mendacity Securing

37
Places & times of hearing
multiplied

A current to think of is — how, b
on the occasion of one and the same demand
encrease is given to the number of the places in which this or that operation is performed in relation to it,
and thus at times to the
number of what it at
encrease is in like manner
given, without ease as also to the
distance between one of
those times and another

how as places of hearing are multiplied, hours of hearing multiplied
and thrown at a distance from one another.

38
demands made & disposed
of before Justice of peace
stance: no reason why
demands in Superior Courts
shd not be settled to example.

First as to multiplication of the encrease given to the
number of the places. When in a it is before a Justice of the
peace that the demand whatever it be is heard and disposed of,
if all the evidence that which the case has furnished is all of it in readiness,
frequently as it happens the demand is disposed of at one and the same time in
one and the same place at one and the same time: in the apartment
in which the species of is Judge, and frequently in the same hour or
even half hour or quarter of an hour in which the demand
is made. Nor in by far the greater number of the cases in
which the ab it before the superior Courts that the demand must
be brought there is nothing in the nature of the case that affords
any the smallest objection to exactly the same unity of time
and place: witness ground of the demand, money due for goods sold and delivered:
money due for work and so many days labour performed: [money due on an
account settled in kind the demand being the same in kind the ground of it
in point of law the and in point of fact the same, the evidence
by on the ground of which the demand is suspended or resisted being the same,
no more need is there of any additional time or place in the
case where the sum demanded is £10,000 than in the case where
it amounts to no more than 10s.]



Identifier: | JB/056/256/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 56.

Date_1

1828-07-21

Marginal Summary Numbering

37-38

Box

056

Main Headings

Procedure Code

Folio number

256

Info in main headings field

Jud

Image

001

Titles

Category

Text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

C1 / F12

Penner

Watermarks

Marginals

George Bentham

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

18312

Box Contents

UCL Home » Transcribe Bentham » Transcription Desk
  • Create account
  • Log in