The pleader's guide, a didactic poem, by J. Surrebutter, 2 books1796 |
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Page 10
... fhall be imputed to Hiм , nor He any way fuffer in his Interefts , which are certain and permanent . Bac . 2 Misfeafance fignifies wrong doing ; Lord C. J. Hale HIM the juft rights of Empire give For ever in 10 [ Book I. PLEADER'S GUIDE .
... fhall be imputed to Hiм , nor He any way fuffer in his Interefts , which are certain and permanent . Bac . 2 Misfeafance fignifies wrong doing ; Lord C. J. Hale HIM the juft rights of Empire give For ever in 10 [ Book I. PLEADER'S GUIDE .
Page 30
... appear , Give him with fuftian and bombast So thick a fog o'er truth to cast , With words of fuch due fize and fitness To badger and confound a witness , That all who hear him fhall confefs For language , 30 [ Book I. PLEADER'S GUIDE .
... appear , Give him with fuftian and bombast So thick a fog o'er truth to cast , With words of fuch due fize and fitness To badger and confound a witness , That all who hear him fhall confefs For language , 30 [ Book I. PLEADER'S GUIDE .
Page 31
John Anstey. That all who hear him fhall confefs For language , manner , and address , He fairly equals in renown Those two choice Heroes of the Gown , So fam'd for Ciceronian Ease 3 And Demofthenic * ΔΕΙΝΟΤΗΣ , Those Neftors of the ...
John Anstey. That all who hear him fhall confefs For language , manner , and address , He fairly equals in renown Those two choice Heroes of the Gown , So fam'd for Ciceronian Ease 3 And Demofthenic * ΔΕΙΝΟΤΗΣ , Those Neftors of the ...
Page 43
... to be the King's Debtor , it is fuggefted as of courfe , that he is the lefs able to pay the Debt by reafon of the Injury complained of in the Action . Due homage to their worth fhall pay And all their Lect . V. ] 43 PLEADER'S GUIDE .
... to be the King's Debtor , it is fuggefted as of courfe , that he is the lefs able to pay the Debt by reafon of the Injury complained of in the Action . Due homage to their worth fhall pay And all their Lect . V. ] 43 PLEADER'S GUIDE .
Page 44
John Anstey. Due homage to their worth fhall pay And all their various powers display ? If haply John - a - Stile provoke The legal fight ' gainst John - a - Noke , The LATITAT the foe befieges And baffles him in Banco Regis . Skill'd ...
John Anstey. Due homage to their worth fhall pay And all their various powers display ? If haply John - a - Stile provoke The legal fight ' gainst John - a - Noke , The LATITAT the foe befieges And baffles him in Banco Regis . Skill'd ...
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Common terms and phrases
Action againſt ancient Assault Bail becauſe Book Bore BORE'UM Bother Cafe Capias caſh caus'd Cauſe Civil Law Clients Common Law COUNSELLOR BORE'UM COUNSELLOR BOTHER'UM Court Dæmon Dear Job Debt Declaration Defendant Defendant's Detinue DOE and RICHARD doom'd e'en e'er eaſe Engliſh erft ev'ry fame feast fhall Fiction fight firſt fo called fome fubject fuch Gentlemen give GUDGEON GULL HAWK iffued imparlance JOHN DOE JOHN-A-GUDGEON JOHN-A-GULL join'd Judge Jury Juſtice King King's Bench Lanfranc Latitat Law French Law's Lawyers learned Lect LECTURE VII Lord moſt muſt ne'er Nonfuit o'er Oath once Original Writ Pandects PAPINIAN Parchment parties perfon Pindus Plaintiff PLEADER'S GUIDE Pleas Procefs profeffional Pupil Purſe Record reign seem'd Sheriff Shrieve SIMON TROUT Special Pleader Special Pleading Statute Suit SURREBUTTER SURREBUTTER'S TENCH TEWKESBURY theſe thoſe thou thro Toadland Truth Twas ULPIAN uſe words wrath Writ of Execution
Popular passages
Page 14 - Agree with thine adversary quickly, while thou art in the way with him ; lest at any time the adversary deliver thee to the judge, and the judge deliver thee to the officer, and thou be cast into prison. Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt by no means come out thence, till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing.
Page 4 - Yet not the more Cease I to wander where the Muses haunt Clear spring, or shady grove, or sunny hill, Smit with the love of sacred song...
Page 44 - Chaos umpire sits, And by decision more embroils the fray By which he reigns. Next him, high arbiter Chance governs all.
Page 21 - ... itself is immediately prejudicial or injurious to the plaintiff's person or property, as battery, nonpayment of debts, detaining one's goods, or the like; yet where any special consequential damage arises, which could not be foreseen and provided for in the ordinary course of justice, the party injured is allowed, both by common law and the statute of Westm. 2, c. 24, to bring a special action on his own case, by writ formed according to the peculiar circumstances of his own particular grievance.
Page 77 - Stay, Mr. Chubb ; speak out, Sir, do ! Did Gull beat Gudgeon ? Is that true ? Chubb. Beat him ! He beat him black and blue. I never see'da prettier fight, So full of malice like, and spite. Bore. A fight ! Ho ! ho ! the truth's come out, A fair set-to — a boxing...
Page 17 - Writ of Error is a commission to judges of a superior court, by which they are authorized to examine the record upon which a judgment was given in an inferior court, and, on such examination, to affirm or reverse the same according to law.
Page 61 - for that " with divers jugs, To wit, twelve pots, twelve cups, twelve mugs, Of certain vulgar drink called toddy, Said GULL did sluice said GUDGEON'S body.
Page 62 - I scarce could read one single word, Nor in my books of Common Place One feature of the Law could trace, Save Buzzard's nose and visage thin, And Hawk's deficiency of chin, Which I while lolling at my ease Was wont to draw instead of pleas; My chambers I equipt complete, Made friends, hir'd books, and gave to eat.
Page 82 - TROUT'S story was a string of Fictions, Self-praises, and self-contradictions ; But, (not to waste your precious moments With idle and superfluous Comments) CHUBB swore, on cross-examination, GUDGEON gave GULL great provocation, And both agreed to strip in Buff, And fight it out at fisty-cuff — Now fighting's in itself an action That gives both parties satisfaction, A secret joy the Bruiser knows In giving and receiving blows ; An inward transport, only tasted By those who've thoroughly been basted...
Page 7 - And forc'd with hard words, blows, and bruises, To labour on Poetic ground, Dactyls and Spondees to confound, And when become in Fictions wise, In Pagan histories and lies ; Were sent to dive at Granta's cells, For Truth in Dialectic wells, There duly bound for four years more...