| 1828 - 562 pages
...reason for their repeal. Here, perhaps, it may be as well for me to state the conclusions to which the best consideration that I have been able to give to the subject has led me, so far as I have at present advanced with it. The law, as it now stands, acknowledges... | |
| Jesse Addams - 1825 - 544 pages
...the present suit, so far as the charges of incontinence are concerned. Upon the whole, however, after the best consideration that I have been able to give to the subject, the statute appears to me so clearly to have been framed, olio intuitu to that for which it... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - 1826 - 590 pages
...Mr. Bellamy can be accommodated, particularly, with reference to the two outer lobbies ? — After the best consideration that I have been able to give to the subject, I can find no accommodation for Mr. Bellamy, without removing offices and officers for whom... | |
| Sir Frederick William Trench - 1827 - 230 pages
...Commons, Mr. Bellamy can be accommodated, particularly with reference to the two outer lobbies ? — After the best consideration that I have been able to give to the subject, I can find no accommodation for Mr. Bellamy, without removing offices and officers for whom... | |
| 1869 - 972 pages
...continue the chain of representation, and that is the question for the Court to consider. Now, after the best consideration that I have been able to give to the case, I have come to the conclusion that the applicant is not entitled, and that the chain of representation... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, John Scott - 1841 - 922 pages
...question of force was properly withheld by the learned judge from the consideration of the jury. After the best consideration that I have been able to give to the subject, 1 am strongly inclined to think, that, if the jury had found that the circumstances under... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, James Manning, Thomas Colpitts Granger - 1841 - 1114 pages
...question of force was properly withheld by the learned judge from the consideration of the jury. After the best consideration that I have been able to give to the subject, I am strongly inclined to think that, if the jury had found that the circumstances under which... | |
| United States. District Court (Maine), Edward Henry Daveis - 1849 - 464 pages
...Thomas, it was decided that he was entitled to hold them against the assignees. Upon the whole, after the best consideration that I have been able to give to the case, it appears to me that the money which Nathaniel Brown paid to the defendants was, in the legal... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - 1852 - 754 pages
...of the ordinary reThe Earl of Derby sources of the country in times of peace, hut also beeause, from the best consideration that I have been able to give to the subject, and from the consideration given to it by successive Committees of this and the other House... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Chancery - 1853 - 880 pages
...the course of the argument]. The (a) 1 Myl. $ K. 410. (b) 1 Mac. $ O. 488. The LORD CHANCELLOR. 1852. On the best consideration that I have been able to give to this case during the argument, I can see no objection to the order which has been made in the Court... | |
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