JB/116/652/008: Difference between revisions

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eventual disagreement.<pb/>
eventual disagreement.<pb/>


<note><unclear>11</unclear> To <hi rend="underline">"tender"</hi><lb/>
<unclear>11</unclear> To <hi rend="underline">"tender"</hi><lb/>
satisfaction<lb/>
satisfaction<lb/>
in money the<lb/>
in money the<lb/>
Line 30: Line 30:
have <add>been</add> given, 3,<lb/>
have <add>been</add> given, 3,<lb/>
4, 5, or 6, weeks<lb/>
4, 5, or 6, weeks<lb/>
before.</note>
before.


<note><hi rend="underline">A</hi> sum being<lb/>
<note><hi rend="underline">A</hi> sum being<lb/>

Revision as of 20:41, 18 July 2021

Click Here To Edit Sheet extracted from the Penitentiary Contract Act 34. G.3. C.84 §6.
as referred to in a Letter from Mr Bentham to Mr Secretary Long dated
31 Jan.y 1800.
The words scored with red Ink exhibit the whole of the matter
relative to the treaty for buying out the Leases, and the money to
be provided for that purpose. Those with black ink provide the case for
eventual disagreement.
---page break---

11 To "tender"
satisfaction
in money the
Feoffee must
have the money
in hand
To have the
money he must
have some particular
sum
of money: for
example, the
proposed £1000
— For him to
have the money
by any particular
day, an
Order must
have been given, 3,
4, 5, or 6, weeks
before.

<note>A sum being
confessed by
necessary for
the purpose,
does it lie
within the province
of the
Sollicitor, in
this case, any
more than in
that of the
purchase money,
to say what the amount of the sum shall be, or at what time the order for it
shall be issued?

According to the Sollicitor's plan, if in, the Feoffee's treatys with all
the several parties interested must have been brought to conclusion, the time for removal fixed, the damage in each
case liquidated, and the sum demanded acceded to by the Feofee or refused, before he
will be at liberty so much as to apply for an Order to be given for a Warrant for the
compensation — money for any one of the parties. The parties interested are at least 38
families, 18 of them occupiers of 10 many Houses. Three Public Houses, and a
considerable distillery are of the number. Add to these a close-stocked Nursery Ground of above 7 acres, a Market Garden Ground of 11 Acres; with other too long to state 40 may such treaty the Feofee must hold up to the of the
poorly the necessity of removal by a certain day. In
the day he must in each instance either show indifference
at his own expense and that of the establishment, without
compensation, that interval out
. He must likewise offer money: but after the experiences he has had: he humbly prays to be excused from making any such offers, before any means of making them good are in his hands.



</note>



Identifier: | JB/116/652/008"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 116.

Date_1

1794-07-07

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

116

Main Headings

panopticon versus new south wales

Folio number

652

Info in main headings field

Image

008

Titles

sheet extracted from the penitentiary contract act 34 g.3.c.84 § 6 as referred to in a letter from mr bentham to mr secretary long dated 31st january 1800

Category

printed material

Number of Pages

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

(1219-1228)

Penner

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

jeremy bentham

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

annotated by bentham; see note 10 to letter 1494, vol. 6, of which this is the original annotated copy of the act

ID Number

38185

Box Contents

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