The Rules of Evidence on Pleas of the Crown: Illustrated from Printed and Manuscript Trials and Cases, Volum 2

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J. Butterworth, London, and J. Cooke, Dublin, 1802 - 668 sider
 

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Populære avsnitt

Side 483 - ... shall be pleaded or given in evidence in any Court, or admitted in any Court to be good, useful or available in law or equity...
Side 454 - From the variety of cases relative to judgments being given in evidence in civil suits these two deductions seem to follow as generally true: First, that the judgment of a court of concurrent jurisdiction directly upon the point is as a plea a bar, or as evidence, conclusive between the same parties upon the same matter directly in question in another court...
Side 464 - When the accessory is brought to his trial, after the conviction of the principal, it is not necessary to enter into a detail of the evidence on which the conviction was founded; nor doth the indictment aver that the principal was in fact guilty. It is sufficient if it reciteth with proper certainty the record of the conviction. This is evidence against the accessory...
Side 565 - Holt was at first of opinion, that this was murder, a single box on the ear from a woman not being a sufficient provocation to kill in this manner, after he had given her a blow in return for the box on the ear...
Side 436 - Ireland, or out of one county into another, within the said realm of Ireland, or into places where they are not known, and there become to be married, having another husband or wife living, to the great dishonour of God and utter undoing of honest men's children and others...
Side 541 - Though the indictment be against the prisoner for aiding, assisting, and abetting A, who was acquitted, yet the indictment and trial of this prisoner is well enough, for who actually did the murder...
Side 461 - ... marriage. So that admitting the sentence in its full extent and import, it only proves, that it did not yet appear that they were married, and not that they were not married at all...
Side 635 - ... no way privy to, or at least to make a man's own act appear to have been done at a time when it was not done, and, by force of such a falsity, to give it an operation which, in truth and justice, it ought not to have.
Side 565 - What is that to you, you bitch ?" The woman thereupon gave him a box on the ear, and Stedman struck her on the breast with the pommel of his sword.
Side 572 - But if the process be defective in the frame of it, as if there be a mistake in the name or addition of the person on whom it is to be executed, or if the name of such person, or...

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