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1824. Jany. 8 1831 Aug. 3 M Constitutional Code or Procedure
Ch. XII Judiciary collectively §.13. Justice for the Helpless English practice
2
or 6. While this on pretence of relief oppression is applied to defendants plaintiffs suits, so, by same had to Defendants.
While thus, in the guise of on pretence of affording relief administers oppression is applied to the plaintiffs side, it is applied in the same instance and by the same stroke hand to on the defendant's side
or 7 On pain of indefinitely worse consequences, no sooner has plaintiff paid his money than Defendant is made to pay a correspondent sum.
To plaintiff, no money no relief: this is all.
or 8. To Defendant, it no money, suffering without limit. So long as he has a farthing left, on he must go, or under the name of cost, reimburse the money disbursed by plaintiff in : every proceeding back to a subsequent expenditure.
No sooner has the plaintiff paid his money, than the defendant, be his conduct ever of blame finds himself under the obligation of paying a correspondent sum of money: and this under to save himself from pain of much worse consequences. If the man on the plaintiffs side will not pay the money he is at, he is but where he was: at the hand of the Judge he obtains no relief: but at those same hands neither does he in any shape experience p oppression. Not so the Defendant. Pay what in the first instance is demanded of him he must, or whatsoever be the which by the suit is endeavoured to be imposed upon him, he must undergo it: undergo this suffering, and what is more, be the demand ever so groundless he must repay the expense with which his antagonist adversary has been suffered to saddle him on condition of charging himself with it in the first instance. Being an in the suit he must now go on with it and go on with it to the end & every expenditure leads this to a secondary one.
The Defendant of the uttermost farthing
or 9. Defendant exhausted, out comes the Judge with a gross He is in c as well might a rider say this of a horse when hand which had just such under its his load.
No sooner is he exhausted than he becomes does exhaustion oblige him to cease his payment after a gross he is uttered a Judge comes out with a gross he is the ground of out of which a sufficient warrant and this he is made a employed a sufficient warrant for adding insult to exhaustion: he is declared to be in contempt.
or 10 Continuance? Yes: the Judge. Object of contempt, what? , Justice.
The charge has the same truth in it, or if the object of it were a horse who unable any longer to bear his load sinks just sinks under it. Not that any in this case there is any want of contempt: but the person on whose part breast it has place is the Judge, and the object of it towards which it manifests itself is Justice are the plain rules are the laws of truth and the principles of justice of justice — those rules so obvious principles which have already been brought to view.
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