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<head>1829 June 12<lb/>Petitions</head> <p><note>supplement</note><lb/>(1) <note>II Elucidation<lb/>§.6. Danish Reconciliation</note></p> <p><note>56<lb/>Insufficiency of this<lb/>institution</note></p> <p>Highly and unquestionably conducive as it is, the insufficiency<lb/>of this <gap/> <add>with reference</add> to the accomplishment of its benevolent and<lb/><del>in a</del> every way meritorious purpose, one single consideration will<lb>at the outset suffice to <sic>shew</sic>. No otherwise <add>In no other case/event</add> than with the consent<lb/>of the adverse party — the proposed defendant, can the denial of<lb?>justice to the plaintiff side have <add>on any individual instance</add> been served. But <del><gap/></del><lb/>without such consent to cause justice to be done <add>rendered</add> is not in the power of<lb/>this same tribunal. <add>on every occasion</add> A propose defendant has had but to maintain<lb/>a sullen silence in order to deprive the proposed plaintiff of all benefit<lb/>from the power given to the <add>these</add> Commissioners. On <add>In</add> every such case<lb/><add>whatsoever may have been the magnitude of injury sustained by him</add> he remains therefore without any possibility of obtaining redress<lb/>or remedy from any other source than these <add>authority than this</add> same ordinary<lb/.judicatories <del>by whom</del> for remedy to whose flagrant inaptitude<lb/>this same beneficent institution was devised. But, of these same<lb/>judicatories one cardinal vice is <hi rend="underline">expensiveness</hi> <add>or certainly in</add> factitious <sic>expence</sic>imposed as a condition to <add>no more than</add> a chance of relief and that for <gap/><lb/>of the <sic>expence</sic> and profit extractable out of it rendered tardy. To<lb/>what extent the amount of this needless and factitious <sic>expence</sic> had<lb/>been <gap/> is not stated not can be reached so much as by<lb/>conjecture. <add>but</add> whatsoever it be, <del>prop</del>in exact proportion to it is<lb/>the denial of justice, and the number of the <gap/> at all<lb/>times subjected by it, to that <gap/> and substance of all <gap/></p> <p><note>58<lb/>Number of <sic>dropt</sic>causes<lb/>not attributable to the<lb/>fee gathering courts alone</note><?p> <p>Of the number of <del>those</del> the instances which in recourse to judicial <gap/><lb/>has been <sic>dropt</sic></add> In the several years <del>of</del> <add>the account of</add> which has as yet been received<lb/>the <gap/> <gap/> to that of the whole number received by this<lb/>the whole number of these tribunals in the Kingdom of Denmark<lb/>is that of <!-- blank spaces --><gap/> or <gap/> a y. and we have seen that <del>for the giving</del><lb/>for the production</add> of this whole number the fee-gathering system of judicatories<lb/>is in its nature not incpaable of proving itslef the efficient<lb/>cause</p> | |||
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1829 June 12
Petitions
supplement
(1) II Elucidation
§.6. Danish Reconciliation
56
Insufficiency of this
institution
Highly and unquestionably conducive as it is, the insufficiency
of this with reference to the accomplishment of its benevolent and
in a every way meritorious purpose, one single consideration will<lb>at the outset suffice to shew. No otherwise In no other case/event than with the consent
of the adverse party — the proposed defendant, can the denial of<lb?>justice to the plaintiff side have on any individual instance been served. But
without such consent to cause justice to be done rendered is not in the power of
this same tribunal. on every occasion A propose defendant has had but to maintain
a sullen silence in order to deprive the proposed plaintiff of all benefit
from the power given to the these Commissioners. On In every such case
whatsoever may have been the magnitude of injury sustained by him he remains therefore without any possibility of obtaining redress
or remedy from any other source than these authority than this same ordinary<lb/.judicatories by whom for remedy to whose flagrant inaptitude
this same beneficent institution was devised. But, of these same
judicatories one cardinal vice is expensiveness or certainly in factitious expenceimposed as a condition to no more than a chance of relief and that for
of the expence and profit extractable out of it rendered tardy. To
what extent the amount of this needless and factitious expence had
been is not stated not can be reached so much as by
conjecture. but whatsoever it be, propin exact proportion to it is
the denial of justice, and the number of the at all
times subjected by it, to that and substance of all
58
Number of droptcauses
not attributable to the
fee gathering courts alone<?p>
Of the number of those the instances which in recourse to judicial
has been dropt</add> In the several years of the account of which has as yet been received
the to that of the whole number received by this
the whole number of these tribunals in the Kingdom of Denmark
is that of or a y. and we have seen that for the giving
for the production</add> of this whole number the fee-gathering system of judicatories
is in its nature not incpaable of proving itslef the efficient
cause
Identifier: | JB/081/279/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 81. |
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1829-06-14 |
56-58 |
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081 |
petition for justice |
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279 |
petitions |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
c1 |
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jeremy bentham |
b&m 1829 |
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arthur moore; richard doane |
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1829 |
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26066 |
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