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1828 July 20
Judicial Establishment or Procedure Code
Preface
Judicial Fees origin of
4
For Judicature, remuneration
necessary.
Current with the division of the fields of judicature
and the with its necessary mode lines of division and demarcation was the not
less necessary of remuneration enjoyed employed for engaging
men to devote their labour and time to the exercise of the
function of a Judge.
5
King not rich enough
thence the bulk of it thrown
on the suitors
The whole quantity of money in the case land/Country
was extremely small, and the King had money in hand
in sufficient quantity of it to ensure a regular periodical
remuneration to any in authority under him.
5
Thence, no fee, no
redress; or liberty
of self-defence
Salary
being thus impossible, fess were substituted as they only thing
possible the was application by any one for justice
at the charge of any other man was never received without
fees paid by him to the Judge and persons under in authority under
him: no fees no redress.
6
Defendan
6
Plaintiffs fees paid,
to render produce Defendant's
compliance
his body was seized:
so ultimately his goods
to be sold sold.
7
Not paying fees, contempt
was abstracted
to him, and the punish
dealt with accordingly:
sheep contempt of wolf.,
On the other hand when any
such application was made, no opportunity for contesting the
justice of it was afforded, but in similar and correspondent
terms: with the service d if the fees were not paid either
the service demanded by the applicant at the hands of the Judge
at the charge of the proposed defendant was rendered
of course, or what was much more easily
and promptly effected, the person of the proposed Defendant
was seized and kept in prison for the confinement somewhere
for the purpose of compelling him: on this occasion when
poverty was the real cause, contempt, for the purpose of affording
an apparent ground for the hardship was the assigned name,
contempt, as if contempt were ascribed to the sheep for
disobedience to the call of the wolf.
8
Given by King to
Judge in f a respect
commanding garment.
Not that the payment was w exclusively in the shape of
fees: for while for each particular service rendered plaintiff and
defendant gave him money, to the Judge the King gave him money
as a sort of general return gave him a suit of cloth comparatively
small sum sufficient to prevent him from slavery
and a suit of cloth with finery on it to mark his appearances in
in and command respect
from the imagination
of the beholder and
by thus operating in the
imagination command
the sort and degree of respect regarded as necessary to be secure obedience.
Identifier: | JB/056/246/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 56. |
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1828-07-20 |
4-8 |
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056 |
Procedure Code |
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246 |
Judicial Establishment or Procedure Code |
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001 |
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Text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
C2 / F2 |
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B&M 1828 |
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Arthur Moore; Richard Doane |
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1828 |
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18302 |
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