| Nasser Hussain - 2009 - 205 sider
...common law, issues out of the King's Bench by a fiat from the Chief Justice, or any of the other Judges, running into all parts of the King's dominions, for...subjects is restrained, wherever that restraint may be inflicted.5? As the judges of the Supreme Court at Calcutta were drawn from the King's Bench and were... | |
| W. Frederick Zimmerman - 2004 - 354 sider
...Likewise, Blackstone explained that the writ "runlsl into all parts of the king's dominions" because "the king is at all times entitled to have an account...the liberty of any of his subjects is restrained." 3 Blackstone *131 (emphasis added). Ex parte Mwenya, l1960l 1 Q- B. 241 (CA), which can hardly be viewed... | |
| Horst Fischer, Avril McDonald - 2011 - 1046 sider
...108-125). The court's jurisdiction was recognised from early times as extending to any part of the Crown's dominions: "for the King is at all times entitled...his subjects is restrained wherever that restraint is inflicted" (Blackstone, Commentaries (1768) vol 3 p. 131, cited by Lord Evershed MR, ibid, p. 292;... | |
| Elihu Lauterpacht, C. J. Greenwood, A. G. Oppenheimer - 2005 - 886 sider
...108-25). The court's jurisdiction was recognised from early times as extending to any part of the Crown's dominions: . . . "for the King is at all times entitled...his subjects is restrained wherever that restraint is inflicted." [Blackstone, Commentaries (1768), vol. 3 at p. 131, cited by Lord Evershed MR, ibid.,... | |
| 1845 - 492 sider
...great statute ; as well as to the maxim of law, that the sovereign is at all times entitled to have account why the liberty of any of his subjects is...restrained, wherever that restraint may be inflicted ? They rely upon their last charter granted by King Charles II., on the 10th of October in the fourteenth... | |
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