Gentlemen, your whole concern should be to do your duty, and leave consequences to take care of themselves. You will receive the law from the court. Your verdict, it is true, may endanger the prisoner's life, but then it is to save other lives. If the... Retrospect of Western Travel - Side 282av Harriet Martineau - 1838 - 239 siderUten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| Mayo Williamson Hazeltine - 1903 - 464 sider
...be by agreement, to countenance, to aid the perpetrator. And if so, then he is guilty as PRINCIPAL. Gentlemen, your whole concern should be to do your...doubt, you will convict him. If such reasonable doubts of guilt still remain, you will acquit him. You are the judges of the whole case. You owe a duty to... | |
| Daniel Webster - 1903 - 370 sider
...be by agreement, to countenance, to aid the perpetrator. And if so, then he is guilty as PRINCIPAL. Gentlemen, your whole concern should be to do your...doubt, you will convict him. If such reasonable doubts of guilt still remain, you will acquit him. You are the judges of the whole case. You owe a duty to... | |
| Edwin Du Bois Shurter - 1903 - 278 sider
...confession. Gentlemen, your whole concern in this 6ase should be to do your duty, and let consequences take care of themselves. You will receive the law...reasonable doubt, you will convict him. If such reasonable doubt of guilt still remains, you will acquit him. You are the judges of the whole case You owe a duty... | |
| Edwin Du Bois Shurter - 1906 - 386 sider
...And if so, then he is guilty as PRINCIPAL. 124. Gentlemen, your whole concern should be to do your 30 duty, and leave consequences to take care of themselves....doubt, you will convict him. If such reasonable doubts of guilt still remain, you will acquit him. You are the judges of the whole case. You owe a duty to... | |
| Edwin Du Bois Shurter - 1908 - 288 sider
...be by agreement, to countenance, to aid the perpetrator. And if so, then he is guilty as PRINCIPAL. Gentlemen, your whole concern should be to do your...and leave consequences to take care of themselves. With consciences satisf1ed with the discharge of duty, no consequences can harm you. There is no evil... | |
| Alvin Victor Sellers - 1917 - 340 sider
...agreement, to countenance, to aid, the perpetrator, and, if so, then he is guilty as principal. 236 Gentlemen, your whole concern should be to do your...doubt, you will convict him. If such reasonable doubts of guilt still remain, you will acquit him. You are the judges of the whole case. You owe a duty to... | |
| Thomas Samuel Duke - 1910 - 728 sider
...of the evidence, Mr. Webster closed his argument with the following impressive appeal to the jury: "Gentlemen, your whole concern should be to do your...doubt, you will convict him. If such reasonable doubts of guilt still remain, you will acquit him. You are the judges of the whole case. You owe a duty to... | |
| Henry Seidel Canby, John Baker Opdycke - 1913 - 640 sider
...be by agreement, to countenance, to aid the perpetrator. And if so, then he is guilty as PRINCIPAL. Gentlemen, your whole concern should be to do your...doubt, you will convict him. If such reasonable doubts of guilt still remain, you will acquit him. You are the judges of the whole case. You owe a duty to... | |
| John Davison Lawson - 1917 - 1012 sider
...by agreement — to countenance, to aid the perpetrator. And if so, then he is guilty as principal. Gentlemen, your whole concern should be to do your...prisoner's guilt has been shown and proved, beyond all reaesonable doubt, you will convict him. If such reasonable doubts of guilt still remain, you will... | |
| Antoinette Knowles - 1916 - 376 sider
...varies in only one word. Let us change the order of ideas in the second sentence, and note the result. "If the prisoner's guilt has been shown and proved...beyond all reasonable doubt, you will convict him. He should, however, be acquitted by you if reasonable doubt of guilt still remains." We see, by this... | |
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