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09-Mar-2012: under construction by Diane Folan. Please do not amend.
34
C
Reasons Of Frauds relative to the Coin.
2. The Punishment if it were not groundless would be unprofitable :
when it is only by a single piece or by a very few
pieces at a time that a man puts off bad money it is impossible
to know by this circumstance alone that he really knows
it to be bad: so that allowing of prosecutions in such a case
would be more likely to be productive of vexation to the innocent , than to be of any use towards the prevention of delinquency.(a) Quest.II.
Note.
The particular subject matter of this Note , it will be observed,
is local : but the general cautions that may be deduced from it are1
applicable to the Laws of all countries alike as well as to all manner
of offences . I thought , the , there would be no , It seemed therefore , that if permitted to stand , it
might not be without its use .
it to stand.
(a) Provision in a British Law punishing on Presumption of Complicity. According to a British Statute (15. Geo. II. Ch. 28. S. 2)
a severe punishment is inflicted on any man who utters counterfeit
money knowing it to be so , though there be no proof
of his being in confederacy with the coiner , and without making
any distinction in favour of a man who has taken bad
Identifier: | JB/071/168/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 71. |
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not numbered |
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071 |
penal code |
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168 |
of frauds relative to the coin |
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002 |
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copy/fair copy sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f33 / f34 / f35 / f36 |
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[[watermarks::myears [lion with crown motif]]] |
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caroline fox |
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23571 |
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