| 1861 - 600 sayfa
...the whole course of the discussion between the judge and the advocates assumes that no question is, or can be, raised which will call for the application...dispute now litigated, and that, if such a rule be sot discovered, it is only that the necessary patience, knowledge, or acumen is not forthcoming to... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - 1861 - 432 sayfa
...the whole course of the discussion between the judge and the advocates assumes that no question is, or can be, raised which will call for the application...known law which will cover the facts of the dispute nowTitigated^and that, if such a rule be not discovered, it is only that the necessary patience, knowledge,... | |
| 1861 - 736 sayfa
...the whole course of the discussion between the judge and the advocates assumes, that no question is, or can be raised, which will call for the application...principles but old ones, or of any distinctions but such as hare long since been allowed. It is taken absolutely for granted that there is somewhere a rule of... | |
| Anonymous - 1861 - 604 sayfa
...allowed. It is taken absolutely 'ot grunted that there is somewhere a rule of known law which will two the facts of the dispute now litigated, and that, if such a rule be frjt discovered, it is only that the necessary patience, knowledge, or acumen is not forthcoming to... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1861 - 604 sayfa
...the whole course of the discussion between the judge and the advocates assumes that no question is, or can be, raised which will call for the application of any principles hut old ones, or of any distinctions but such as have long since been allowed. It is taken absolutely... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - 1874 - 436 sayfa
...the whole course of the discussion between the judge and the advocates assumes that no question is, or can be, raised which will call for the application...granted that there is somewhere a rule of known law which_ will cover the fkcts of _ the dispute now litigated, and that, if such a rule be not discovered,... | |
| 1903 - 456 sayfa
...adjudication, the whole course of discussion between the judge and the advocate assumes that no question is, or can be, raised which will call for the application...any principles but old ones, or of any distinctions bul. such as have long since been allowed. It is taken absolutely for granted that there is somewhere... | |
| 1898 - 444 sayfa
...before an English Court for adjudication the whole course of the discussion assumes that no question is, or can be, raised which will call for the application...distinctions but such as have long since been allowed. Yet the moment the judgment has been rendered and reported we slide unconsciously or unavowedly into... | |
| Henry Percy Farrell - 1917 - 238 sayfa
...any way whatsoever, and whenever they have respectively delivered a judgment or stated an opinion, "it is taken absolutely for granted that there is...will cover the facts of the dispute now litigated." " Yet the moment the judgment has been rendered and reported, we slide unconsciously or unavowedly... | |
| Raymond Cocks - 1988 - 236 sayfa
...argue that the whole practice of law is a practice of history in that, as Maine stressed so often, it is 'taken absolutely for granted that there is...will cover the facts of the dispute now litigated'. As this itself suggests, Samuel has taken steps to explore the extent to which historical analysis... | |
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