<span class="mw-page-title-main">JB/056/268/001</span>

Transcribe Bentham: A Collaborative Initiative

From Transcribe Bentham: Transcription Desk

Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts

JB/056/268/001

Revision as of 14:47, 27 September 2025 by Ohsoldgirl (talk | contribs)
Ready for review. Submitted by Ohsoldgirl

Click Here To Edit

1828 July 25
Jud

☞ Turn to p 5

Preface
Equity procedure

63 or 11
1. Evidence in favour of self
not to be believed 2. In Equity
defendant's evidence if agt
himself, admitted as true if
not contradicted by 2 witnesses.
Rule for excluding self serving
evidence — elicited.

According to one maximin equity as well in Common Law practice no man is to be believed as to
any thing which makes in favour of himself: on the ground
nothing which the plaintiff says , to wit in his Bill, to wit is admitted in the character of evidence. According to another maxim
every thing in so far as the character of the Defendant evidence is admitted
which it is not in Common Law practice but is in Equity
practice every thing which the defendant says in
his Answer as the word is as provided at on the supposition of its making it being understood that to
against him admitted in the character of evidence [+] [+] and unless contradicted
by his extraneous witnesses
for time
In practice the
exclusion thus professed in profession put upon upon self-serving evidence
is however a pretence to a very considerable extent<lb?>elicited: for note whatsoever part of the Defendant's confession is regarded as making against
the defendant, the Defendant is very ill assisted of by the dexterity
of his learned assistant a sufficient portion of
that sort of matter is not inserted: as parenthesis
in any number may be inserted, one in the belly of another
the operation necessary to this purpose is plain and easy

64: or 12
Narrative is composed of statements
of facts — supposition
is that it consists of
1 distinct intelligible parts
1 — matter if favor of Deft
2 — dodisfavor of do
a kind of a defendant
This is not in the nature of
things.

Received or not in evidence a narrative is imposed
consisting of an aggregate of statements made in relation to an aggregate
of facts of matters of facts (states of things or nature some contemporary with
relation to each other, other succession. When of a narrative
made on this occasion the whole of the matter comes from
the pain of life, on one hand what the law of evidence that or that hard being the suppose
is that it consists of two distinguishable or
one continuing so much of the matter as will operate in
difference of the defendant, the other of so much as
will operate in his favour, the matter of each parcel being
at the same time intelligible. To this supposition the nature
of things is not altogether favourable: as well might it
be supposed that if f on every page of this paper one
haf half of the words were drawn out in the way of lottery,
the other half would remain intelligible. the The more compleatly incapable
incapable the rule is of being complicit
with the loss is the
difficulty experienced
in eliciting it the endeavour
employed in the of it.



Identifier: | JB/056/268/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 56.

Date_1

1828-07-25

Marginal Summary Numbering

63 or 11 - 64 or 12

Box

056

Main Headings

Procedure Code

Folio number

268

Info in main headings field

Jud

Image

001

Titles

Category

Text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

C6

Penner

Watermarks

Marginals

George Bentham

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

18324

Box Contents

UCL Home » Transcribe Bentham » Transcription Desk
  • Create account
  • Log in