The Growth of English Law: Being Studies in the Evolution of Law and Procedure in EnglandStevens and sons, limited, 1911 - 260 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 62
Página 10
... reason for its action as a court of law , though it is a curious fact that the dual character which the Court of Exchequer after- wards came to possess as the forum in which disputes about the revenue were settled and as an ordinary ...
... reason for its action as a court of law , though it is a curious fact that the dual character which the Court of Exchequer after- wards came to possess as the forum in which disputes about the revenue were settled and as an ordinary ...
Página 11
... reasons . It was doubtless regarded as a kind of tribunal of arbitration : it was trusted in its special disputes ; it was without the draw- backs of the local courts , and those who composed it were quite willing to enlarge their ...
... reasons . It was doubtless regarded as a kind of tribunal of arbitration : it was trusted in its special disputes ; it was without the draw- backs of the local courts , and those who composed it were quite willing to enlarge their ...
Página 14
... reason that it was not yet required . The Chancery was , there- fore , not a judicial tribunal at all . The need of a separate court of equity is not yet felt , for the King's Court , which is not yet hampered by many statutes or by ...
... reason that it was not yet required . The Chancery was , there- fore , not a judicial tribunal at all . The need of a separate court of equity is not yet felt , for the King's Court , which is not yet hampered by many statutes or by ...
Página 23
... reason for his demand ; the grantee of the writ must be going abroad on the king's business or be incapacitated by age or sickness . In time the same names begin to appear ; it is easy indeed to understand how , in a particular locality ...
... reason for his demand ; the grantee of the writ must be going abroad on the king's business or be incapacitated by age or sickness . In time the same names begin to appear ; it is easy indeed to understand how , in a particular locality ...
Página 24
... reason for the growth of two separate classes of lawyers is not visible . In 1280 the corporation of London directed as to the civic courts that " no countor was to be an attorney . " Of the cause of this direction we are ignorant , nor ...
... reason for the growth of two separate classes of lawyers is not visible . In 1280 the corporation of London directed as to the civic courts that " no countor was to be an attorney . " Of the cause of this direction we are ignorant , nor ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Growth of English Law: Being Studies in the Evolution of Law and ... Edward Stanley Roscoe Sin vista previa disponible - 2018 |
The Growth of English Law: Being Studies in the Evolution of Law and ... Edward Stanley Roscoe Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Términos y frases comunes
admitted agent appointed articled articled clerks attorneys and solicitors bankruptcy barristers became bill body cause Chancery character clerk clerkship clients committee Common Law concerned conveyancing Court of Admiralty Court of Chancery criminal disputes duty eighteenth century England English law evidence existence eyre fact favour fees forest laws Gentlemen Practisers guineas Helston Henry History of English Hodgson House Ibid important influence Inns of Chancery Inns of Court interest John judges judgment judicial jurisdiction jurisprudence justice justices in eyre king King's Bench land law reform Law Society lawyers Lincoln's Inn litigation London Lord Chancellor Lord Stowell maritime law matter medieval ment modern Oleron paid Parliament period persons political practice principles prisoner prize law procedure profession professional Records regard reign respectable ship social solicitors statute suggested Temple tion town tribunal Wallis William wrote
Pasajes populares
Página 136 - there was a society of men among us, bred up from their youth in the art of proving, by words multiplied for the purpose, that white is black and black is white, according as they are paid.
Página 96 - ... wanderers over the face of the earth, with their hand against every man, and every man's hand against them.
Página 12 - That I will truly and honestly demean myself in the Practice ' of an Attorney [or Solicitor, as the Case may be,] according to the best of my Knowledge and Ability.
Página 137 - Contra, if the great predominant character of a port be that of a port of naval military equipment, it shall be intended that the articles were going for military use, although merchant ships resort to the same place, and although it is possible that the articles might have been applied to civil consumption...
Página 2 - ... and if any such attorney be hereafter notoriously found in any default of record, or otherwise, he shall forswear the court, and never after be received to make any suit in any court of the King.
Página 127 - I think, not tenable to the extent in which it has been thrown out ; for though in the ordinary state of things he is a stranger to the cargo, beyond the purposes of safe custody and conveyance, yet in cases of instant and unforeseen and unprovided necessity, the character of agent and supercargo is forced upon him, not by the immediate act and appointment of the owner, but by the general policy of the law...
Página 105 - York.2 1 S. and B. Webb, English Local Government: The Parish and the County (London, 1906), p.
Página 62 - Gracious heaven! if I am doomed to be wretched, bury me beneath Iceland snows, and let me feed on blubber; stretch me under the burning line, and deny me thy propitious dews; nay, if it be thy will, suffocate me with the infected and pestilential air of a democratic club-room; but save me from the desk of an attorney.