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A Law when compleat.
A law is compleat, (that is in compleatly
 expressed) when the act it prohibits- (to take
 the instance of a prohibition Law) is so fully and the
  punishment for it (to take the instance of 
 a penal Law,) are so expressed as that, granting the act
 so described to have been done, no supposition
 can be framed, on which, according
 to the Will of the Legislator, the punishment
 in question shall not take place
 This being the case, for Law  one shall scarce
 see an instance perhaps of a Law standing entire
 with having all it's parts collected together into
 one continuous series uncompleated with
 any part of any other Law.
Several qualifying or restrictive clauses there are which
 are common to a large group of Laws:
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and which must be taken into the expression
 of each before it is compleat.
 for instance are those which Let the Law against Robbery stand serve
 for an example. Let Robbery be
 the act prohibited, and hanging the
 punishment under which  for it. Such a Law Let the
 Law framed against it be - "If any one
 committed Robbery he shall be hanged."
 This Law I say is not compleat cannot be given for a compleat
 one. For a supposition can be framed
 on which, according to the Will of the
 Legislator (according to the Will indeed of any Legislator)
 the punishment in question should
 not take place.
The reason is the act prohibited is not as
 yet perfectly described. the circumstances person perform
INTROD. A Law - when compleat BR
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of the circumstances of the person performing 
 it are not yet ascertained by the proper
 limitations. It is not meant that  all persons whatever with no exception in
 in all circumstances the state persons in all circumstances
 shall suffer as is mentioned. Certain Exceptions
 would be there are which would be made by every
 Legislator to when they should , exceptions
 to the description of the person, that is
 to the description of the act. Exceptions,
 I mean, (to take these two only for instance) in favour
 of persons under Infancy and
 Insanity. What is meant therefore is not that
 all persons whatever shall suffer that
 punishment for that  act but so many
 only as remain after persons under
 those circumstances have been excepted.
 The Law against Robbery is therefore
 not compleat untill a clause establishing
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the exceptions has been inserted
 in it.
But there is equal need of the a clause
 to the same purport to be added to
 the respective Laws against many other 
 To the Laws against Theft for example,
 against Fire-raising, and against Murder.
Each of these 4 Laws therefore, in order to be compleat, requires this same
 clause to be made part of, and to be inserted
 in them it. But if it were inserted
 as a part of each of them it
 would be thrice repeated: which would be
 a waste of words. To save this, it is
 would naturally be inserted in the Code
 apart from all any all of them, ready
 to apply to any. By which means
 there is not one of them all whose parts
 would follow each other in compleat an order+ +compleat and uninterrupted.
 this being wanting to every one.
| Identifier: | JB/070/008/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 70. | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| not numbered | |||
| 070 | of laws in general | ||
| 008 | introd. a law - when compleat | ||
| 001 | |||
| text sheet | 1 | ||
| recto | |||
| jeremy bentham | [[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [britannia with shield motif]]] | ||
| 23123 | |||