The Law Magazine and Law Review: Or, Quarterly Journal of Jurisprudence, Volum 30Butterworths, 1871 |
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Side 18
... civil cases , the witnesses called by the parties should be required to depose to facts within their knowledge alone , and should not be allowed , under any circumstances , to give their opinions respecting the points in dispute . If ...
... civil cases , the witnesses called by the parties should be required to depose to facts within their knowledge alone , and should not be allowed , under any circumstances , to give their opinions respecting the points in dispute . If ...
Side 30
... Civil Service Commissioners display a spasmodic vigilance , and pluck a few unhappy wights , who , relying on the fact that so many before them have crammed their way through their time of probation , attempt to travel by the same royal ...
... Civil Service Commissioners display a spasmodic vigilance , and pluck a few unhappy wights , who , relying on the fact that so many before them have crammed their way through their time of probation , attempt to travel by the same royal ...
Side 31
... civil justice ad- ministered in presidency towns may be said to be European justice , while Mofussil justice may be said to be Indian justice . We do not say , and , in fact , we do not believe , that it is because Mofussil justice is ...
... civil justice ad- ministered in presidency towns may be said to be European justice , while Mofussil justice may be said to be Indian justice . We do not say , and , in fact , we do not believe , that it is because Mofussil justice is ...
Side 33
... civil servants themselves have been as persistent in their assertions of the necessity of this reform as any other body of men . Public - spirited natives have again and again brought this question into prominent notice , and yet ...
... civil servants themselves have been as persistent in their assertions of the necessity of this reform as any other body of men . Public - spirited natives have again and again brought this question into prominent notice , and yet ...
Side 36
... Civil Service - the rooted conviction that ex quovis ligno fit judex - if not altogether abandoned ( it would be too sanguine , perhaps , to expect this ) has , at all events , been very consider- ably mitigated . Some of the ablest ...
... Civil Service - the rooted conviction that ex quovis ligno fit judex - if not altogether abandoned ( it would be too sanguine , perhaps , to expect this ) has , at all events , been very consider- ably mitigated . Some of the ablest ...
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Populære avsnitt
Side 162 - State, such persons shall be guilty of an offence against this Act, and shall be punishable by fine and imprisonment, or either of such punishments, at the discretion of the Court before which the offender is convicted ; and imprisonment, if awarded, may be either with or without hard labour.
Side 161 - (3.) Equips any ship with intent or knowledge, or having reasonable cause to believe that the same shall or will be employed in the military or naval service of any foreign State at war with any friendly State...
Side 162 - Act, and the following consequences shall ensue : (1) The offender shall be punishable by fine and imprisonment, or either of such punishments, at the discretion of the Court before which the offender is convicted, and imprisonment, if awarded, may be either with or without hard labour.
Side 74 - The neutral flag covers enemy's goods, with the exception of contraband of war ; 3. Neutral goods, with the exception of contraband of war, are not liable to capture under enemy's flag; 4. Blockades, in order to be binding, must be effective ; that is to say, maintained by a force sufficient really to prevent access to the coast of the enemy.
Side 79 - Very different is the case of a trade which the neutral has never possessed, which he holds by no title of use and habit in times of peace, and which, in fact, can obtain in war by no other title, than by the success of the one belligerent against the other, and at the expense of that very belligerent under whose success he sets up his title ; and such I take to be the colonial trade, generally speaking.
Side 162 - Where any ship is built by order of or on behalf of any foreign state when at war with a friendly state, or is delivered to or to the order of such foreign state, or any person who to the knowledge of the person building is an agent of such foreign state, or is paid for by such foreign state or such agent, and is employed in the military or naval service of such foreign state, such ship shall, until the contrary is proved, be deemed to have been built...
Side 85 - The trade of neutrals with belligerents in articles not contraband is absolutely free, unless interrupted by blockade; the conveyance by neutrals to belligerents of contraband articles is always unlawful, and such, articles may always be seized during transit by sea.
Side 161 - ... accept or agree to accept any commission or engagement in the military or naval service of any foreign state at war with a friendly state, — He shall be guilty of an offence against this Act, and shall be punishable...
Side 252 - ... improvident alienations, or dispositions, made by languishing or dying persons, or by other persons, to uses, called charitable uses, to take place after their deaths, to the disherison of their lawful heirs ; for remedy whereof it was enacted.
Side 159 - An Act to regulate the conduct of Her Majesty's Subjects during the existence of Hostilities between Foreign States with which Her Majesty is at Peace...