★ Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
<head>1825. <sic>Jan<hi rend="superscript">y</hi></sic> 25<lb/>Procedure Code</head> <!-- some in pencil --> <p><note><sic>Ch.</sic> VIII Hearing Simple</note><lb/>Instruction (2 <note>§. English practice<lb/>§.7 <gap/> <gap/><lb/>Difficulty<lb/><foreign>Anglicé</foreign> has solution</note></p> <p><note>3<lb/>Consequent denial<lb/>of justice to those<lb/>incapable of <gap/><lb/>for it</note></p> <p>To lawyers of all sorts and sizes, there is convenience<lb/>maximized <del>In consequence</del> To non-lawyers the consequence<lb/>is that those <add>he</add> who have not wherewithal to pay for <del>the <gap/><lb/>of justice</del> a ticket in the justice lottery, in the character of<lb/>plaintiff goes to a certainty without justice and in this<lb/>situation are at least mere <gap/> of the whole population<lb/>with the exception of perhaps one <gap/>: while in the character<lb/>of defendant he who can not pay the costs of defence<lb/>is in every instance between plaintiff and lawyers <gap/><lb/be <del>not</del> compete and entire <gap/> without possibility of<lb/>escape, the Judge having <del><gap/>,,/del> taken care to know nothing<lb/>about the <gap/> matter, and <del>having</del> <add>being</add> thus as <sic>compleatly</sic> guiltless<lb/>of the unease he has produced, as a murderer would<lb/>be of murder by shutting his eyes while the <gap/> was<lb/>doing his office.</p> <p><note>4<lb/>In penal cases the<lb/>troublesome part of<lb/>the business committed<lb/>to underlings</note></p> <p>In a penal case the matter stands on a different<lb/>footing. Judges themselves could not save <add>secure</add> themselves against<lb/>having their <gap/> broken open if the applicants were not<lb/>received as indiscriminately as here proposed to give<lb/>information <gap/> the higher class of <add>most highly punished</add> criminal offences.<lb/>But here too the Judge of the highest rank <del><gap/></del> <gap/><lb/>has escape from responsibility and trouble in every shape<lb/>this <add>troublesome</add> part of the business is committed to an underling<lb/>who may be occupied about it for days while a small<lb/>part of the day is <add><gap/></add> all that is occupied by the great Judge<lb/>matters having been brought into preparation for that<lb/>purpose.</p> <p><note>5<lb/>Convenience provided<lb/>for the underlings</note></p> <p>Mention not small is the <add>degree of</add> convenience provided<lb/>for the underling <add>subsidy</add> and the class of those whom every body<lb/>knows. If the individual accused by the information given <del>by<lb/>the</del> is the <gap/> nobody knows, the information being upon<lb/>oath the <gap/> is sufficient <gap/> for <add>the <gap/></add> incarceration, without any<lb/>such trouble as that of an inquiry into the trustworthiness of the<lb/>informant.</p> | |||
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{ | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{In_Progress}} |
1825. Jany 25
Procedure Code
Ch. VIII Hearing Simple
Instruction (2 §. English practice
§.7
Difficulty
Anglicé has solution
3
Consequent denial
of justice to those
incapable of
for it
To lawyers of all sorts and sizes, there is convenience
maximized In consequence To non-lawyers the consequence
is that those he who have not wherewithal to pay for the
of justice a ticket in the justice lottery, in the character of
plaintiff goes to a certainty without justice and in this
situation are at least mere of the whole population
with the exception of perhaps one : while in the character
of defendant he who can not pay the costs of defence
is in every instance between plaintiff and lawyers <lb/be not compete and entire without possibility of
escape, the Judge having ,,/del> taken care to know nothing
about the matter, and having being thus as compleatly guiltless
of the unease he has produced, as a murderer would
be of murder by shutting his eyes while the was
doing his office.
4
In penal cases the
troublesome part of
the business committed
to underlings
In a penal case the matter stands on a different
footing. Judges themselves could not save secure themselves against
having their broken open if the applicants were not
received as indiscriminately as here proposed to give
information the higher class of most highly punished criminal offences.
But here too the Judge of the highest rank
has escape from responsibility and trouble in every shape
this troublesome part of the business is committed to an underling
who may be occupied about it for days while a small
part of the day is all that is occupied by the great Judge
matters having been brought into preparation for that
purpose.
5
Convenience provided
for the underlings
Mention not small is the degree of convenience provided
for the underling subsidy and the class of those whom every body
knows. If the individual accused by the information given by
the is the nobody knows, the information being upon
oath the is sufficient for the incarceration, without any
such trouble as that of an inquiry into the trustworthiness of the
informant.
Identifier: | JB/052/413/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 52. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
1825-01-25 |
3-5 |
||
052 |
procedure code |
||
413 |
procedure code |
||
001 |
instructive |
||
text sheet |
1 |
||
recto |
e2 |
||
jeremy bentham |
|||
17086 |
|||