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<head>Judicial Estate</head> | |||
<p>Justice <gap/></p> | |||
<p>Consult experience nothing can well be<lb/>stronger than the testimony it affords in favour<lb/>of this reasoning. It is in Great Britain alone<lb/>of all nations that we shall find united all the<lb/>conditions requisite for a fair and <sic>compleat</sic> trial.<lb/>It is in that <add>rich</add> mine of peculiarities that we shall<lb/>find the extremes of simplicity and multiplicity<lb/>in<lb/> | |||
in judicature with various degrees of publicity<lb/> | |||
for their accompaniment. Cast a glance over the principal tribunals, we shall find their reputation<lb/> | |||
for justice running with wonderful exactness in <del>the direct</del> a ratio compounded of<lb/> | |||
the direct proportion of the degree of publicity<lb/> | |||
that affords their operations and the converse proportion<lb/> | |||
of the number of which they are<lb/> | |||
composed.</p> | |||
<p>On the principle of <add>unsuspected</add> immaculate honour we<lb/> | |||
may hold the Court of Chancery in its two degrees <add>of jurisdiction</add>, to each composed <add>consisting / constituted</add> of but <add>by</add> a single Judge.<lb/> | |||
In the sink of <add>corruption and</add> discredit we may see the most numerous of the two Houses of Parliament: the most numerous body of Judges any where perhaps<lb/> | |||
to be seen till the new formed and virtuous National Assembly<lb/> | |||
of France found it necessary to exhibit itself occasionally<lb/> | |||
<add>in</add><lb/></p> | |||
<note>Not a breath of<lb/> | |||
suspicion shewing<lb/> | |||
against it <del>since the<lb/> | |||
days of</del> for more than<lb/> | |||
a century and a half<lb/> | |||
for the prosecution of L<add>d</add> Macclesfield had<lb/> | |||
nothing to do with his<lb/> | |||
character as a Judge.</note> | |||
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{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} |
Judicial Estate
Justice
Consult experience nothing can well be
stronger than the testimony it affords in favour
of this reasoning. It is in Great Britain alone
of all nations that we shall find united all the
conditions requisite for a fair and compleat trial.
It is in that rich mine of peculiarities that we shall
find the extremes of simplicity and multiplicity
in
in judicature with various degrees of publicity
for their accompaniment. Cast a glance over the principal tribunals, we shall find their reputation
for justice running with wonderful exactness in the direct a ratio compounded of
the direct proportion of the degree of publicity
that affords their operations and the converse proportion
of the number of which they are
composed.
On the principle of unsuspected immaculate honour we
may hold the Court of Chancery in its two degrees of jurisdiction, to each composed consisting / constituted of but by a single Judge.
In the sink of corruption and discredit we may see the most numerous of the two Houses of Parliament: the most numerous body of Judges any where perhaps
to be seen till the new formed and virtuous National Assembly
of France found it necessary to exhibit itself occasionally
in
Not a breath of
suspicion shewing
against it since the
days of for more than
a century and a half
for the prosecution of Ld Macclesfield had
nothing to do with his
character as a Judge.
Identifier: | JB/051/387/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 51. |
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25-29 |
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051 |
evidence; procedure code |
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387 |
judicial estab. judges number |
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001 |
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text sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f31 / f32 / f33 / f34 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::l munn [britannia with shield emblem]]] |
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benjamin constant |
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16552 |
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