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1823. Novr 13 +
Constitutional Code or procedure
II
Ch. Procedure in general
§.1
Thus can of and
true
Introduction
1
the compass of procedure:
Means of
and execution obtained
rightly employed, the object
is attained: probable
existence of some matters of
fact; execution given
to an some ordinance of law:
ordaining a service
which, in of to every
individual is, in a
certain case described by it
shall, at his instance
be rendered to him by
a functionary occupied
in a certain place
the
situation of a Judge
Of Judicial Procedure in general
understood, the business of procedure has written in narrow
compass. Means of proof/probation and means of execution — this.
obtained and/obtained and duly/rightly employed, the business is done: probative of the existence
or an existence of some alledged matter of fact: execution given to a perfect and <add>an ordinary arrangement of
the law, ordinary what<l/>shall be done in favour
and at the suit instance of a
person in whom in
order of some portion of
the mass of law the existence
of a that same certain matter
of fact is stated in
conferring on him a<lb?>right or title to some
a certain service at
the hands of a Judge
a service which consists
in procuring at the hands
of another person a certain
other service.</add>
2
To any eye accustomed
to grasp the whole field
of the subject and place
over it in all directions
the whole mass of the arrangements
necessary
will be transparent.
To an eye by which the whole field of the subject is
grasped, and which can carry itself over the whole experience
in any duration at any time, the whole contents mass of the contents
presents a transparent image spectacle
3
Evidence is
to of
existence.
Synonymous to Proof is in the length of English law the word
Evidence: is a term a relative appellation:
one appellation employed for the designation of any matter
of fact, considered or tending to produce in the mind a
pursuance relative to the existence or non-existence
of any other matter of fact in this latter may in relation
to the former be termed the principal matter of fact, the subject matter
of evidence is the fact evidenced to or the fact in
evidence or the facts in question.
4.
Evidence if matter of fact considered in tending to produce in the mind it is presented to, belief as to In : 1. Principal
evidentiary do
Considered in respect of its mode of its application
of the application made of it to the purpose of producing
such provenance — about it is distinguished the end distinguished
not direct and circumstanced.
5
Evidence is direct in so far as the belief is producible without the of a of any other matter of fact: circumstantial in so far as by means of
such interpretation: from which it he infers the existence of some fact he does not
The evidence afforded by an a source of evidence
is either direct or circumstantial
It is direct or say immediate in so far as it contributes to produces or helps to produce
the pursuance of the existence or of the non-existence of this
without the intervention of any other matter.
It is circumstantial or say indeterminate, in as
far as without producing, or of itself helping to produce without the help of any other matter of fact
such through the any of some other the matter of fact, namely gap/> the way
of inference: from which a more he infers the existence of something else which he does not procure.
Identifier: | JB/055/001/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 55. |
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1823-11-13 |
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055 |
Constitutional Code; Procedure Code |
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001 |
Constitutional Code or Procedure |
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001 |
Introduction / Of Judicial Procedure in general |
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Text sheet |
1 |
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J WHATMAN TURKEY MILL 1822 |
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Jonathan Blenman |
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1822 |
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17722 |
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