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31 May 1804
Evidence
ch. Justice when had,lb/> but
(2
5
The breach of contract
to which it mocks my
case not but be accompanied
with confessions
of wrong; which
is not not the case where<lb?> the contracts were terminally
or knowingly
illegal ab mitio
In rime wind it be to say — it does not make more dishonest, those which it causes men to
do is not dishonesty since by doing what they are thus permitted to do,
they do no more than fulfill the declared intentions of the law.
It is not in this case, as in the case of a contract, suppose between accomplices in depredation prohibition
rendered illegal, in contemplation of the of which is
not only compelled, but in contemplation of its mischievous
prohibited and rendered permissible. The mischief resulting from the
fulfillment of such a contract is manifest to every eye: the existence
of the prohibition grounded on the contemplation of that
mischief is manifest: notorious the and
the law are distinctly and explicitly declared: the greed that
results from the non-performance of the contract — say the violation
of it — the breach of faith — for that such it is there can
be no doubt — is equally manifest. indispensible But in the case of
the outlawry the the matter of the law — the simply
permission law are not so explicitly declared: the goods resulting
from the a man's availing himself of the permission is uncertain indistinct
and questionable. So far as the law succeeds in making men finds in its endeavours to
make man break their faith, the good effect around it finds
altogether: and so far as it succeeds it succeeds but partially,
producing instead of a satisfaction which in proportion of to the
suffering attendant on the obligation of rendering it would have operated as binders in the
character of punishment, it produces nothing but a punishment
so mismanaged as not to operate in the character of satisfaction.
6
In respect of a sequestration
which it professes
to make for the sake of
justice it in fact
divides in the great majority
of instances it divides
or rather would if
resorted to the effects of
the outlaw among a
swarm of official
professional depredators
This then is what it thus mark as to what the law ought to do and does not do? what
then does it do? To the injury of the distressed creditor It takes the property of the distressed still debtor if
he has any, and divides it among a multitude an almost less multitude of professional
and official hands: or as some would say in for shortness (and would they be to
be blamed?) among a flock of harpies.
When each has had his meal a chance then remains, it
must be acknowledged, of a for the parties. But what chance? certainly
not a chance of one to .
Identifier: | JB/057/060/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 57. |
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1804-05-31 |
5-6 |
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057 |
evidence; procedure code |
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060 |
evidence |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
e2 |
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jeremy bentham |
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18390 |
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