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11
C
Simple Personal Injuries.
Excuse 3. Provocation.
Provocation is constituted by injury: and it
may be constituted either by an injury to the party
who is punished, or to one that is dear to
him.
A real provocation is whine you or your
friend have actually received an injury from
the person you are provoked with.
An imaginary provocation is where you
believe sincerely but erroneously same such
injury to have been done, but prove mistaken.
The mistake may respect either the matter of
fact or of right law:; as in the case of errornous supposition of a ground of justification.
See . . . . . .
A legal injury is one that is punishable by
Law.
A moral injury is any whether punishable <add>or not by law,</add> which yet being
prejudicial to the party injured is apt to be
punished by the censure of the world: for instance
an act of , treachery, or ingratitude.
A provocation unless it be recent shall not be admitted were as
an excuse. unless it be a one. It is to In general
it isnot to be deemed a recent one if it have
been received more than a month before the injury
in excuse for which it is alledged.
The time at which a A provocation shall be deemed to have
been received at is the time at which it came to the
knowlege of the party to whom it is a provocation [For
it is not till then that it can have begun exciting his resentment.
Identifier: | JB/073/080/003"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 73. |
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not numbered |
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073 |
law in general |
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080 |
simple personal injuries |
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003 |
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text sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f9 / f10 / f11 / f12 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [britannia with shield motif]]] |
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23920 |
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