| Charles Lucas - 1751 - 690 str.
...Stranger. " 2. THE Jury may have Evidence from their own perfonal Knowlege, by which they may be aflured, and fometimes are, that what is depofed in Court is...Judge is a Stranger, and he" knows no more of the Fail, than he has learned in Court, and perhaps by falfe Depofitions; andconfequently, knows nothing.... | |
| Charles Lucas - 1785 - 370 str.
...Stranger. " 2. THE Jury may have Evidence from their own perfonal Knowlege, by which they may be aflured, and fometimes are, that what is depofed in Court is...the Judge is a Stranger, and he knows no more of the Fa£l, than he has learned in Court, and perhaps by falfe Depofitionsj andconfequently, knows nothing.... | |
| William Stephens Smith, Thomas Lloyd - 1807 - 340 str.
...are, that what is deposed in court is absolutely false ; but to " this the judge is a stranger, and knows no more of the ^ fact " than he hath learned in court, and perhaps by false depositions, " and consequently knows nothing." " To which end is the jury returned out of the... | |
| George Worthington - 1840 - 72 str.
...that what is deposed in court is absolutely false ; but to this the judge is a stranger, and f *129 1 he knows no more of the fact than he hath ^learned in *- " J court, and perhaps by false depositions, and consequently knows nothing. The jury may know the... | |
| Edward Wilcox Hinton - 1919 - 1136 str.
...by which they may be assured, and sometimes are, that what is deposed in court is absolutely false; but to this the judge is a stranger, and he knows...fact than he hath learned in court, and perhaps by false depositions, and consequently knows nothing. 3. The jury may know the witnesses to be stigmatised... | |
| Sir David Lindsay Keir, Frederick Henry Lawson - 1928 - 520 str.
...by which they may be assured, and sometimes are, that what is deposed in court, is absolutely false: but to this the judge is a stranger, and he knows...fact than he hath learned in court, and perhaps by false depositions, and consequently knows nothing. 8. The jury may know the witnesses to be stigmatized... | |
| James Q. Whitman - 2008 - 286 str.
...by which they may be assured, and sometimes are, that what is deposed in court, is absolutely false: but to this the judge is a stranger, and he knows...fact than he hath learned in court, and perhaps by false depositions, and consequently knows nothing. True private knowledge must decide the case. In... | |
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