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English parliamentary
English parliamentary
papers. <pb/>
papers. <pb/>
Ch.XII. Judiciary Collectively?
S.29. Judicatories &amp;c.
21  1
Account taking Judicationtory,
what.
22.2
Evidence reward by
it, a Voucher.
conclusive without
oral- Add statement
by a 3.d person.
23.3
Occupation of the Judicatory
receiving
1. from one party, admissions
of money  &amp;c
received by him-confessional
self chaging
evidence.
2 from do. vouchers-
consisting of evidence
by a 3d. person of his
having performed the
services by the aggregate
of which he wd
be discharged.
24.4.
Incidental application.
1.Disallowance for a
voucher for non-authenticity.
2. Allegation of proudly
non-performance
or mal-performanceit evidence
in lieu of a
voucher cost.
&#x2014;
25 or 5.
An account is an
assemblage of suits:
as many as items:
by each item, one party
claims a service
from the other.  Each
claims <add>a decision</add> from the Judges.<pb/>
Ch. XII. Judiciary Collectively
S.29. Judicatories for accounts
and claims.
Instructions.
26 or 6.
Ye, two classes there
are of cases in which
no more than one
party is seen acting:
1. in one, as Defendant:
one person giving account
of money &amp;c received by him.
2. In the other, as pursuer:
claiming money
&amp;c. as due to him out
of a fund.
28 or
21
In the denomination
Of the Court of Claims
expressiveness not altogether
wanting, but inferior to
be CLaim receiving:
of AUdit Court the
denomination <gap/>
expressive: less being heard
in that than in any other
of the services, performance
of which
a voucher attests.
3. Application for liberty
to exhib





Revision as of 09:42, 9 May 2021

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1825. Decr. Constitutional Code. Ch.XIII. Judicial Collectively S.2 Judicatories d. 14. The greater the number of these occasional Judicatories for the business in hand, the shorter their duration: thence, the less the time the Judges wd. be abstracted from the Sources of their expectation of permanent location. 15. For though 1. For th location in the temporary Judicatories, experience in the field of service could not be too extensive: yet 2. By such location it would be narrowed, and the locatee made less apt for location in a permanent judicatory. 16. Of each such temporary Judge, it would be the interest to maximize the publicity of his proceedings, that the notoriety of his qualifications for permanent employment may be maximized. 17. For this and other obvious reasons, most apt seat of all these Judicatories would in general be the metropolitan Sub- District - seat of Government.
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Ch.XII. Judiciary Collectively. S.2G. Judicatories 18. With this arrangement compare English do. in use. Evils opposite to the ends of justice maximized. 1. Non-decision: viz. from for vast lengths of time, to a vast proportion of the number of accountants and claimants by the quantity of business for wh. no more than one such Judicatory is provided. 19. 2. Misdecision viz. opportunities for it by 1. Secresy of the proceeding. 2. Judges more than one or two: each, perhaps, with a different locator and patron, whose sinister wishes he will always be able to fulfill: each for the accomplishment of his own, conniving at the accomplishment of the other's. 3. Delay, vexation and expence maximized by the continuance of the Salary of the Judges & their subordinates. 20. For detached exemplifications no room here - Instructive those obtainable from English parliamentary papers.
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Ch.XII. Judiciary Collectively? S.29. Judicatories &c.

21 1 Account taking Judicationtory, what.

22.2 Evidence reward by it, a Voucher. conclusive without oral- Add statement by a 3.d person. 23.3 Occupation of the Judicatory receiving 1. from one party, admissions of money &c received by him-confessional self chaging evidence. 2 from do. vouchers- consisting of evidence by a 3d. person of his having performed the services by the aggregate of which he wd be discharged. 24.4. Incidental application. 1.Disallowance for a voucher for non-authenticity. 2. Allegation of proudly non-performance or mal-performanceit evidence in lieu of a voucher cost. — 25 or 5. An account is an assemblage of suits: as many as items: by each item, one party claims a service from the other. Each claims a decision from the Judges.
---page break---

Ch. XII. Judiciary Collectively S.29. Judicatories for accounts and claims. Instructions. 26 or 6. Ye, two classes there are of cases in which no more than one party is seen acting: 1. in one, as Defendant: one person giving account of money &c received by him. 2. In the other, as pursuer: claiming money &c. as due to him out of a fund.

28 or 21 In the denomination Of the Court of Claims expressiveness not altogether wanting, but inferior to be CLaim receiving: of AUdit Court the denomination expressive: less being heard in that than in any other


of the services, performance of which a voucher attests. 3. Application for liberty to exhib






Identifier: | JB/042/133/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 42.

Date_1

1825-12

Marginal Summary Numbering

[[marginal_summary_numbering::14-20, 21 [or] 1 - 26 [or] 6]]

Box

042

Main Headings

constitutional code

Folio number

133

Info in main headings field

constitutional code

Image

001

Titles

Category

marginal summary sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

e2

Penner

jeremy bentham; john flowerdew colls

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

13056

Box Contents

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