| 1858 - 444 str.
...would cost you £1000, and that all your small stock-in-trade is not worth £100. Perhaps it may so be. The law has nothing to say to that ; if you had taken...sentence upon you. — You will be imprisoned for one day.1 Occasionally, indeed, Mr. Justice Maule's taste for irony led him to forget that it is a two-edged... | |
| John Cordy Jeaffreson - 1873 - 388 str.
...matrimony is less fruitful of happiness now-a-days than in the former times of our history. woman whom you secondly married would have been a respectable matron....sentence upon you. You will be imprisoned for one day.' — Vide ' Law Magazine.' 345 CHAPTER XXV. FAREWELL. THE reader has surveyed the rise and progress... | |
| 1880 - 572 str.
...pounds, and that all your small stock-in-trade is not worth a hundred pounds. Perhaps it may so be. The law has nothing to say to that. If you had taken...convicted culprit, and it is my duty to pass sentence on you. You will be imprisoned for one day." The delightful irony of this has seldom been equalled,... | |
| Frederick Charles Moncreiff - 1882 - 204 str.
...constitution of your country. I see you would tell me that these proceedings would cost you £1,000, and that all your small stock-in-trade is not worth...sentence upon you. You will be imprisoned for one day." The distinction which used to, and to some extent does still, exist between Law and Equity arose from... | |
| 1882 - 668 str.
...so. The law has nothing to say to that. As you have not taken the proceedings I have named, you stand a convicted culprit, and it is my duty to pass sentence upon you. You will be imprisoned for one day." As a recent writer has said, what was justice on one side of Westminster Hall was injustice on the... | |
| 1891 - 488 str.
...Constitution of your country. I see you would tell me that these proceedings would cost you ;£i,ooo, and that all your small stock-in-trade is not worth...sentence upon you. You will be imprisoned for one day." Everything here is perfect, even to the comedy, as it might be called, of the situation. The prisoner... | |
| William Henry Rideing - 1896 - 274 str.
...so. The law has nothing to say to that. As you have not taken the proceedings I have named, you stand a convicted culprit, and it is my duty to pass sentence upon you. You will be imprisoned for one day." As a recent writer has said, what was justice on one side of Westminster Hall was injustice on the... | |
| Ernest Joseph Schuster - 1911 - 370 str.
...proceeded as follows : " I see you would tell me that these proceedings would cost you £1000, and that your small stock-in-trade is not worth £100. Perhaps...culprit, and it is my duty to pass sentence upon you " (Law Magazine and Law Review, vol. v. pp. 23, 24). English public opinion was not proof against the... | |
| |