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4.<lb/><lb/><head>C</head><lb/><head>Of Compensation</head><lb/>score of theft and the better chance a man knows he has of having such<lb/>loss made up to him, the less will be his apprehension be on this<lb/>score.<lb/><lb/>2.<lb/><note>Ways in which a man<lb/>may sustain damage.</note><lb/>The species of delinquency through which damage can<lb/>happen to a man must either be such as affects his person, such as<lb/>affects his property, such as affects his reputation, or such as affects<lb/>his condition or station in life. But it is to be observed that such<lb/>as affect him in any of the other three ways may by their remoter<lb/>consequences affect him in his property.<lb/><lb/><note>§ect III.</note><lb/>§. III. Precedence among different<lb/>Cases in respect to Compensation.<lb/><lb/>1.<lb/>Instructions to the Judge.<lb/><lb/><note>Cases that have the<lb/>best Claim to Compensation.</note><lb/>Cases which afford the strongest claim to compensation<lb/>are those in which at the same time that the party damnified<lb/>sustains a pecuniary or quasi-pecuniary loss the author of the damage<lb/><note>Damage and Profit<lb/>both, pecuniary and quasi-<lb/>pecuniary</note><lb/>reaps a pecuniary or quasi-pecuniary profit.<lb/><lb/>Reasons.<lb/><lb/><note>1. The damage is more<lb/>sure of being made good.</note><lb/>1. Where the loss is of a pecuniary nature, there is more certainty that<lb/>a given sum will make it good, than where it is of any other nature:<lb/>a sum which is given in view of putting the party damnified<lb/>on the same footing in point of happiness as he was before
4.<lb/><lb/><head>C</head><lb/><head>Of Compensation</head><lb/>score of theft and the better chance a man knows he has of having such<lb/>loss made up to him, the less will his apprehension be on this<lb/>score.<lb/><lb/>2.<lb/><note>Ways in which a man<lb/>may sustain damage.</note><lb/>The species of delinquency through which damage can<lb/>happen to a man must either be such as affects his person, such as<lb/>affects his property, such as affects his reputation, or such as affects<lb/>his condition or station in life. But it is to be observed that such<lb/>as affect him in any of the other three ways may by their remoter<lb/>consequences affect him in his property.<lb/><lb/><note>§ect III.</note><lb/>§. III. Precedence among different<lb/>Cases in respect to Compensation.<lb/><lb/>1.<lb/>Instructions to the Judge.<lb/><lb/><note>Cases that have the<lb/>best Claim to Compensation.</note><lb/>Cases which afford the strongest claim to compensation<lb/>are those in which at the same time that the party damnified<lb/>sustains a pecuniary or quasi-pecuniary loss the author of the damage<lb/><note>Damage and Profit<lb/>both, pecuniary and quasi-<lb/>pecuniary</note><lb/>reaps a pecuniary or quasi-pecuniary profit.<lb/><lb/>Reasons.<lb/><lb/><note>1. The damage is more<lb/>sure of being made good.</note><lb/>1. Where the loss is of a pecuniary nature, there is more certainty that<lb/>a given sum will make it good, than where it is of any other nature:<lb/>a sum which is given in view of putting the party damnified<lb/>on the same footing in point of happiness as he was before





Revision as of 18:42, 3 February 2013

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4.

C
Of Compensation
score of theft and the better chance a man knows he has of having such
loss made up to him, the less will his apprehension be on this
score.

2.
Ways in which a man
may sustain damage.

The species of delinquency through which damage can
happen to a man must either be such as affects his person, such as
affects his property, such as affects his reputation, or such as affects
his condition or station in life. But it is to be observed that such
as affect him in any of the other three ways may by their remoter
consequences affect him in his property.

§ect III.
§. III. Precedence among different
Cases in respect to Compensation.

1.
Instructions to the Judge.

Cases that have the
best Claim to Compensation.

Cases which afford the strongest claim to compensation
are those in which at the same time that the party damnified
sustains a pecuniary or quasi-pecuniary loss the author of the damage
Damage and Profit
both, pecuniary and quasi-
pecuniary

reaps a pecuniary or quasi-pecuniary profit.

Reasons.

1. The damage is more
sure of being made good.

1. Where the loss is of a pecuniary nature, there is more certainty that
a given sum will make it good, than where it is of any other nature:
a sum which is given in view of putting the party damnified
on the same footing in point of happiness as he was before




Identifier: | JB/098/043/004"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 98.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

1-3, 1-2, 1

Box

098

Main Headings

penal code

Folio number

043

Info in main headings field

of compensation

Image

004

Titles

Category

copy/fair copy sheet

Number of Pages

4

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f1 / f2 / f3 / f4

Penner

Watermarks

[[watermarks::myears [lion with crown emblem]]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

caroline fox

Corrections

jeremy bentham

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

31651

Box Contents

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