| Joel Barlow Sutherland - 1841 - 560 str.
...from criminal prosecutions before inferior courts. The same rules of evidence, the same legal notions of crimes and punishments, prevail. For impeachments...law, but to carry it into more effectual execution against too powerful delinquents. The judgment, therefore, is to be such as is warranted by legal principles... | |
| United States. Congress - 1852 - 886 str.
...evidence, and the same legal maxims concerning crimes and punishments, as a proceeding contrived not to alter the law, but to carry it into more effectual execution. These" authorities, sanctioned by the practice of one hundred and fifty years, prove the principle... | |
| United States. Congress - 1852 - 890 str.
...evidence, and the same legal maxims concerning crimes and punishments, as a proceeding contrived not to alter the law, but to carry it into more effectual execution. These authorities, sanctioned by the practice of one hundred and fifty years, prove the principle for... | |
| United States. Congress - 1852 - 928 str.
...evidence, and the same legal maxims concerning crimes and punishments, as a proceeding contrived not to alter the law, but to carry it into more effectual execution. These authorities, sanctioned by the practice of one hundred and fifty years, prove the principle for... | |
| 1853 - 832 str.
...from criminal prosecutions before inferior courts. The same rules of evidence, the same legal notions of crimes and punishments prevail. For impeachments...might be obstructed by the influence of too powerful de291 ;icqu«nt*, or not easily discerned in Ihe ordinary cours« cf jurisdiction by reason of the... | |
| Joseph Bartlett Burleigh - 1853 - 354 str.
...from criminal prosecutions before inferior courts. The same rules of evidence, the same legal notions of crimes and punishments prevail. For impeachments...law, but to carry it into more effectual execution against too powerful delinquents. The judgment therefore is to be such as is warranted by legal principles... | |
| New York (State). Secretary's Office - 1853 - 476 str.
...rules of evidence, the same legal notions of crimes and punishments, prevail. For impeachments were not framed to alter the law, but to carry it into more effectual execution against too powerful delinquents. The judgment, therefore, is to be such as is warranted by legal principles... | |
| Thomas Jefferson - 1854 - 608 str.
...rules of evidence, the same legal notions of crimes and punishments, prevail. For impeachments were not framed to alter the law, but to carry it into more effectual execution against two powerful delinquents. The judgment, therefore, is to be such as is warranted by legal principles... | |
| United States. Congress, Thomas Hart Benton - 1856 - 756 str.
...couru. The same rules of evideiice, the same legal mitions of crimes and punishments, prevail. Fur impeachments are not framed to alter the law, but to carry it into more effectual exc-cutuf, where it might be obstructed by the millionte of too powerful delinquents, or not ca>ily... | |
| United States. Congress - 1859 - 266 str.
...inferior courts. The same rules of evidence, the same legal notions of crimes and punishments, prevailed ; for impeachments are not framed to alter the law, but to carry it into more effectual execution against two powerful delinquents. The judgment, therefore, is to be such as is warranted by legal principles... | |
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