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1829 May 23
Petitions

1o
Supplement

(10 §.11 Elucidations
>§. Reconciliative Court
II Opinion-giving benefit

☞ 28 May Quere if not employed?

18
It is a complicated
machine for giving a
law opinion: a
Analogue machine
1. .No of Lords for applying
things veto to laws
Jury (Petty) for applying
people's veto to individual
— application of laws
to individual cases

Now for a or two. Veto in a law — antecedently
to it becoming suit — veto in the application of it to this or that individual
case: to if the complicated instruments employed for this has
purpose the attention of the render law already been directed.
The House n power of the House of Lords, an
for covering from the public observation the oft producing the effect
of a Legal negater — <foreign>le Roi j'avisire: Of this the inclination
attention has for some time been painted by other hands. The power
f the Jury will it numbers a machine for applying a veto
on the part of the people to the exercise of the power of the Jury when
applied to the purpose of inflicting punishment for
this or that individual act of delinquency how clearly so ever
proved.

A piece of machinery not less complicated may be
pronounced this same Reconciliative Tribunal — a machine for giving
by authority a directive opinion in relation to a law case:
and the curious circumstance is — that it is by Non-lawyers that in
this case the opposite is formed and delivered.

Vast as the laggards know to their cost is the amount
of the opinion trash carried on in England by the fraternity of
the la learned: what would they say were it taken out of their
hands? So would it be, according to the extent given to it in the
logical field of service in law and legislation were a set of Reconciliative Courts
established in England, Scotland and Ireland. from
are these

1. The services were obtained at such vast expence, obtained
in the supposition
2. the advice given Clear of all proposed deceptiousness
the advice given will in the ordinary state of things be the
advice given: extraordinary any case in which any sort
deception has place. Why? because, casual
cause of corruption, by an to the action of no sinister interest
will the Member of that stand exposed: ordinary on the
contrary the case in which, in the course of the opinion trade
such deception has place. Why? because in this case to the
actor of sinister interest in a thousand diversified shapes are do these
living out long these walking tabernacles of law learning
at
at all times stand
exposed: advice to constitute or a suit without
right. Advice to employ
in pursuit
remedy with
defendants an
constraint of
: an either- instead of a less dilatory and expensive operation as instruments




Identifier: | JB/081/236/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 81.

Date_1

1829-05-26

Marginal Summary Numbering

[[marginal_summary_numbering::18[?]]]

Box

081

Main Headings

petition for justice

Folio number

236

Info in main headings field

petitions

Image

001

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

e10

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

b&m 1829

Marginals

jeremy bentham

Paper Producer

arthur moore; richard doane

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1829

Notes public

[[notes_public::"28 may quere if not employed?" [note in bentham's hand]]]

ID Number

26023

Box Contents

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