Courts-martial. Law reform. Lady Gwendolen Cecil's "Life of Lord Salisbury". The late Sir Samuel Evans. Neil Primrose. Jack Scott. Edward Horner. Judges and politics. A new part. The Reconstruction of civilizationHodder and Stoughton, limited, 1922 - Great Britain |
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Page 6
... increased the volume of work of that branch of the Staff . One special feature of a court - martial is that its decision against an accused person is not valid until it is confirmed by superior authority , and that its convictions may ...
... increased the volume of work of that branch of the Staff . One special feature of a court - martial is that its decision against an accused person is not valid until it is confirmed by superior authority , and that its convictions may ...
Page 22
... increased . It is essential therefore that the court should not give the seal of its approval to a low standard of discipline by the lenity of its judgment or of its sentence . When once the strict judgment is pronounced , lenience may ...
... increased . It is essential therefore that the court should not give the seal of its approval to a low standard of discipline by the lenity of its judgment or of its sentence . When once the strict judgment is pronounced , lenience may ...
Page 38
... increase of business in the King's Bench Division and in the Probate , Divorce , and Ad- miralty Division . The work in the King's Bench Division , which fell off very seriously during the War , showed signs of increase almost ...
... increase of business in the King's Bench Division and in the Probate , Divorce , and Ad- miralty Division . The work in the King's Bench Division , which fell off very seriously during the War , showed signs of increase almost ...
Page 39
... increased population , stimulated in part by the disturbance of com- mercial conditions which was a direct result of the War . The result , however , is to put a very severe strain upon our judicial machinery . It has already been ...
... increased population , stimulated in part by the disturbance of com- mercial conditions which was a direct result of the War . The result , however , is to put a very severe strain upon our judicial machinery . It has already been ...
Page 40
... INCREASE IN DIVORCE It is not only in the King's Bench Division that the volume of work has increased beyond any reasonable anticipation . If that increase is considered in relation to the judicial strength available , the heaviest ...
... INCREASE IN DIVORCE It is not only in the King's Bench Division that the volume of work has increased beyond any reasonable anticipation . If that increase is considered in relation to the judicial strength available , the heaviest ...
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Admiralty Appeal in Ordinary appointed Army Asquith Assize authority bene gesserit Bill captured cargo civil claim claimants Coalition command Common Law constitution County Court court-martial court-martial officer Crown dealing dealt decision Disraeli Divorce duty effect election enemy existing experience fact German Government High Court House of Commons House of Lords Judges judgment Judicature Judicial Committee jurisdiction justice King's Bench Division Labour Party Law of Nations litigants Lord Chancellor Lord Salisbury Lord Stowell Lords of Appeal matters ment military law mortgagee National Party necessary Neil Primrose neutral never opinion Order in Council organisation Parliament Parliamentary peers persons political position practice present President principle Prize Court proceedings question recognised reform regiment rendered result rule Samuel Evans ship Sir Richard Cooper Sir Samuel Evans sitting soldier Solicitor Statute tion to-day Tory tribunal Whigs writs XVII XVIII
Popular passages
Page 104 - While the guiding principles of the law must be followed, it is a truism to say that international law, in order to be adequate, as well as just, must have regard to the circumstances of the times, including "the circumstances arising out of the particular situation of the war, or the condition of the parties engaged in it:" vide The Jonge Margaretha (1799), 1 C.
Page 85 - In all cases not provided for by these Rules, the practice of the late High Court of Admiralty in England in prize proceedings shall be followed, or such other practice as the President may direct.
Page 98 - ... and others concerned, like underwriters or insurers, would feel a greater sense of fairness and security if, through an owner (though he be an enemy), the case for a seized or captured vessel were permitted to be independently placed before the Court. "For the considerations to which I have adverted, and in order to induce and justify a conviction of fairness, as well as to promote just and right decisions, I deem it fitting, pursuant to powers which I think the Court possesses, to direct that...
Page 151 - That no person who has an office or place of profit under the King, or receives a pension from the crown, shall be capable of serving as a member of the house of commons.
Page 90 - American proprietors made claim to the cargo, but the claim was | disallowed because the p. 671 claimants' interest was not sufficient to support it ; and the court said : ' Captors are supposed to lay their hands on the gross tangible property, on which there may be many just claims outstanding, between other parties, which can have no operation as to them. If such a rule did not exist, it would be quite impossible for captors to know upon what grounds they were proceeding to make any seizure. The...
Page 91 - This Court accordingly ought to, and will, regard the Declaration of Paris, not only in the light of rules binding in the conduct of war, but as a recognised and acknowledged part of the law of nations, which alone is the law which this Court has to administer.
Page 83 - And this is obviously for grounds solid in justice and convenient in practice ; because the two courts administered two different codes or systems of law ; the Prize Courts deal with claims in accordance with the law of nations and upon equitable principles freed from contracts...
Page 142 - A PERFECT COPY OF ALL SUMMONS OF THE NOBILITY TO THE GREAT COUNCILS AND PARLIAMENTS OF THIS REALM, from the XLIX. of King Henry the Hid. until these present Times.
Page 97 - A merchant who is a citizen of an enemy country would not unnaturally expect that when the State to which he belongs, and other States with which it may unhappily be at war, have bound themselves by formal and solemn Conventions dealing with a state of war, like those formulated at The Hague in 1907, he should have the benefit of the provisions of such international compacts. He might equally naturally expect that he would be heard, in cases where his property or interests were affected, as to the...
Page 151 - A Senator shall not be capable of being elected or of sitting or voting as a Member of the House of Commons.