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<p>del>without its being possible to get rid of him.</del><del>The</del> <del>Unpopularity<lb/> on the part of a Judge from whatever<lb/> cause it arise, unpopularity [on the part of a Judge]<lb/><!-- brackets in pencil --> merited or unmerited, if permanent is a very<lb/> serious evil. Indeed its </del><del>in</del><del>being merited or not<lb/> except in as far as its being unmerited affords<lb/> a probability of its ceasing is of no sort of consequence.<lb/> In either <add>Either</add> case it is equally productive<lb/> of apparent injustice: which to every practical purpose<lb/> in as far as expectation is <add>and the sense of security are</add> concerned is<lb/> the same thing with <gap/>. </del></p> | <p>del>without its being possible to get rid of him.</del><del>The</del> <del>Unpopularity<lb/> on the part of a Judge from whatever<lb/> cause it arise, unpopularity [on the part of a Judge]<lb/><!-- brackets in pencil --> merited or unmerited, if permanent is a very<lb/> serious evil. Indeed its </del><del>in</del><del>being merited or not<lb/> except in as far as its being unmerited affords<lb/> a probability of its ceasing is of no sort of consequence.<lb/> In either <add>Either</add> case it is equally productive<lb/> of apparent injustice: which to every practical purpose<lb/> in as far as expectation is <add>and the sense of security are</add> concerned is<lb/> the same thing with <gap/>. </del></p> | ||
<!-- indent --><p> In England <del>a man</del> under the present state<lb/> of the law, a Judge may have contracted a very<lb/> large portion of unpopularity without its being<lb/> possible to get rid of him. <del>This</del> <add><unclear>since</unclear></add> <del>In France this<lb/> might be the case under the provisions of M.<lb/> <unclear>Thonrits'</unclear> Committee. It could not possibly be the<lb/> case there under the provisions I have ventured<lb/> to suggest above. </del> | <!-- indent --> | ||
<p>In England <del>a man</del> under the present state<lb/> of the law, a Judge may have contracted a very<lb/> large portion of unpopularity without its being<lb/> possible to get rid of him. <del>This</del> <add><unclear>since</unclear></add> <del>In France this<lb/> might be the case under the provisions of M.<lb/> <unclear>Thonrits'</unclear> Committee. It could not possibly be the<lb/> case there under the provisions I have ventured<lb/> to suggest above. </del> | |||
<!-- Indent --></p>What makes a Judge unpopular is Common<lb/> Law where he makes the law on <unclear>pretense</unclear> | |||
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Juries Obs.
del>without its being possible to get rid of him.The Unpopularity
on the part of a Judge from whatever
cause it arise, unpopularity [on the part of a Judge]
merited or unmerited, if permanent is a very
serious evil. Indeed its inbeing merited or not
except in as far as its being unmerited affords
a probability of its ceasing is of no sort of consequence.
In either Either case it is equally productive
of apparent injustice: which to every practical purpose
in as far as expectation is and the sense of security are concerned is
the same thing with .
In England a man under the present state
of the law, a Judge may have contracted a very
large portion of unpopularity without its being
possible to get rid of him. This since In France this
might be the case under the provisions of M.
Thonrits' Committee. It could not possibly be the
case there under the provisions I have ventured
to suggest above.
What makes a Judge unpopular is Common
Law where he makes the law on pretense
Identifier: | JB/035/058/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 35. |
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29-30 |
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035 |
constitutional code; evidence; procedure code |
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058 |
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002 |
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text sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f47 / f48 / f49 / f50 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::l munn [britannia with shield emblem]]] |
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benjamin constant |
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10651 |
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