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Certainty - Form of C:Law. Stat. defined
by Bl Comm
The Statute Law is by the Author
The Commentaries
1st In the Introduction p.10 + + Observe there & so many delays in the Common Law which it is necessary should be regularly taken away by Statutes, for them to have any efficacy
2dly In B. 1. p365
The Poor Laws are another subject from
whence the A. of the Comm's takes occasion to statutes
by Statutes, for then that how it is in the tale of most of our Statutes known them to
hav imperfect and inadequate to the purpose
they are designed for where they have not
Foundation of the Common Law to build on. All that has been done therefore for these Laws
three Centuries for toward the purposes in question, full of "miserable shifts & lazie expedients."
If we would read a model of perfect absolute
we must resort to the times of Alfred, whose
Science of Legislation was so well understood
that if the Sovereign had not taken the
to turn Schoolmaster to a few of his Bishops,
there would not have been a Soul in the Kingdom
who could write or read. In proof of this proposition
the Author has had certain Intelligence, that
virtue consequence of the "admirable order in which think
Identifier: | JB/050/063/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 50. |
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certainty form of cn law stat. depreciated by bl. comment<…> |
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jeremy bentham |
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caroline vernon |
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