★ Find a new page on our Untranscribed Manuscripts list.
1831. Sept.5
Const. Code
17(a) Expence
Anglica of
Maniscatedness
1. See now Matchless
Constitution: expense
quadrupted by paying
four Judges for
doing what would
be done less badly
by one.
2. This applies only
to parts of the business
which were
the ends of justice
arrived at would
not be done.
3. Portion done single
-seatedly
1. Trial
2. Chamber business:
present none
but those whose interest
it is that it
be pessimized: misdecision,
expense, &c
maximized.
4. Note here the inconsistency:
one part
not justifiable but
by condemnation
past on another.
5. Judicatories in
which this superfetation
is exemplfied,
this quadruplicity
vice unity, these 3:
in no one of the 3
Equity superior Judicatories
in which 3
are so strangely
piled one upon another
nor in the subordinate
whose Judges
are stiled Masters.
---page break---
17(a) continual
Expense Anglice1
8. Judges even 2 in
cases in which common
sense in union
with common honesty
would forbid all argument
- question for
instance whether a man
without reproach shall
lose his right or a
murderer receive impunity,
because a
Clerk unintentionally
or intentionally has
miswritten a word.
8. Chief having delivered
his Opinion, for
giving to understand
identity of opinion
three cheaper instruments
might be provided:
say a parrot,
a waxwok Judge or
a Plumber's Lay-man.
9. Sole man by whom
rationality id
the Chief: for being
always a Lord, generally
a Peer, sometimes
even a Cabinet
Minister, to him
alone belongs all
the influence: by whom
alone anything worth
noting said.
10. For years together
had sitten unconsulted
by Lord Mansfield
Chief Justice, Penine
Judge Wilks: so declared
he, when driven
into rebellion
by contempt.
18 Expense Gallice Maniscalishness If in France by many seatedness benefit was ever produced it is not to Judicature but to Legislature: viz, by the strength given to the feeble suspensive veto applicable by Judges to despotic legislation, by non- registration. — 19 Expence Gallice of Many seatedness AT present, Salary of Judge of the highest judicatory (the Cour Royale) £750: Judges 55: waste in Salaries £750x54 - yet under such a Constitution, perhaps even this may not be too much to pay for the publication: better spent than on Judges than on Jesuits. 19(a) Written Ao 1827 5 decr. — (a) Of the plethora and penury, waste of money: denial and delay of justice, causes two 1. Of the abuse Mazarine's of the year and add: power of extorting fees sold to Judges.
ChXII Judiciary Collectively § 5 Number in a Judicatory
Identifier: | JB/042/154/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 42. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
1827-12-05 |
17a, 18-19, 19a |
||
042 |
constitutional code |
||
154 |
const. code |
||
001 |
|||
marginal summary sheet |
1 |
||
recto |
|||
13077 |
|||