Report of the Proceedings Before the House of Lords, on a Bill of Pains and Penalties Against Her Majesty, Caroline Amelia Elizabeth, Queen of Great Britain, and Consort of King George the FourthJ. Robins and Company, Albion Press, Ivy Lane, Paternoster Row, 1821 - Queens |
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Page 47
... motion over you ? —Yes ; I heard a noise . Where did you land ? -At Capitan . Where did they go to from thence ? -I do not know , because I did not follow them . Who went on shore at Capitan ? -The Princess , the sister of Bergami ...
... motion over you ? —Yes ; I heard a noise . Where did you land ? -At Capitan . Where did they go to from thence ? -I do not know , because I did not follow them . Who went on shore at Capitan ? -The Princess , the sister of Bergami ...
Page 52
... motion , occasionally extending his arms and snapping his fingers , as if using castanets in a fandango , and ... motion the witness makes , and can judge of it as well as myself . Mr. BROUGHAM . - The motion the man makes may be ...
... motion , occasionally extending his arms and snapping his fingers , as if using castanets in a fandango , and ... motion the witness makes , and can judge of it as well as myself . Mr. BROUGHAM . - The motion the man makes may be ...
Page 61
... motion Sir William Gell retired . Mr. BROUGHAM resumed his cross - examination . After the robbers had attacked or threatened the house , and you fired on them in the way you have described , was not the whole house alarmed by what bad ...
... motion Sir William Gell retired . Mr. BROUGHAM resumed his cross - examination . After the robbers had attacked or threatened the house , and you fired on them in the way you have described , was not the whole house alarmed by what bad ...
Page 79
... DARLINGTON . - In consequence of the objections stated , I beg to withdraw the motion . Theodore Majochi was then placed at the bar , and ex- amined by Mr. Brougham . Do you recollect a German baron visiting the Princess of -79.
... DARLINGTON . - In consequence of the objections stated , I beg to withdraw the motion . Theodore Majochi was then placed at the bar , and ex- amined by Mr. Brougham . Do you recollect a German baron visiting the Princess of -79.
Page 107
... motion in the vessel when they re- clined on the gun ? - During summer there are only light airs , and they are followed by calms : there is very little motion , and it was calm when they were sitting there . - Lord Rosebery . On the ...
... motion in the vessel when they re- clined on the gun ? - During summer there are only light airs , and they are followed by calms : there is very little motion , and it was calm when they were sitting there . - Lord Rosebery . On the ...
Other editions - View all
Report of the Proceedings Before the House of Lords, on a Bill of Pains and ... Joseph Nightingale No preview available - 2019 |
Report of the Proceedings Before the House of Lords, on a Bill of Pains and ... Joseph Nightingale No preview available - 2019 |
Report of the Proceedings Before the House of Lords, on a Bill of Pains and ... Joseph Nightingale No preview available - 2019 |
Common terms and phrases
adjournment afterwards answer asked Attorney-General Baron bed-room bill Brougham Brougham.-I cabin called Captain Carlsruhe carriage Colonel Brown Countess Oldi courier course court cross-examination deck defence dined dining-room door dress Earl Grey Earl of Lauderdale Earl of Liverpool evidence examination Genoa gentleman heard House interpreter Jaffa journey judges justice learned counsel learned friend letter list of witnesses Lord Erskine Lord-Chancellor lordships Majesty Majochi Marquis Marrietti mean Milan months morning motion Naples ness never night noble and learned noble earl noble lord object observed occasion opinion person Pesaro present preter Princeſs Princess and Bergami Princess of Wales proceeding Queen question re-examination received recollect remain remember Royal Highness Royal Highness's rule saw Bergami Schiavini seen servants ship side sister situation sleep slept Solicitor-General swear tell tent thing thought tion told took Villa d'Este voyage wish
Popular passages
Page 358 - First, Whether, in the courts below, a party, on crossexamination, would be allowed to represent, in the statement of a question, the contents of a letter, and to ask the witness whether the witness wrote a letter to any person with such contents, or contents to the like effect, without having first shown to the witness the letter, and having asked that witness whether the witness wrote that letter, and his admitting that he wrote such letter...
Page 463 - ... re-examination, to ask all questions, which may be proper to draw forth an explanation of the sense and meaning of the expressions used by the witness on cross-examination, if they be in themselves doubtful, and, also, of the motive, by which the witness was induced to use those expressions ; but, I think, he has no right to go further, and to introduce matter new in itself, and not suited to the purpose of explaining either the expressions or the motives of the witness.
Page 367 - ... did not, in such letter, make statements such as the counsel shall, by questions addressed to the witness, inquire are or are not made therein...
Page 437 - Lordships' question distinctly in the affirmative or the negative, for the reason I have given, namely, the want of an established practice referring to such a question by counsel; yet, as we are all of opinion that the witness cannot properly be asked, on cross-examination, whether he has written such a thing, (the proper course being to put the writing into his hands, and ask him whether it be his writing,) considering the question proposed to us by your Lordships, with reference to that principle...
Page 434 - Whether, according to the established practice in the courts below, counsel cross-examining are entitled, if the counsel on the other side object to it, to ask a witness whether he has made representations of a particular nature, not specifying in his question whether the question refers to representations in writing or in words...
Page 463 - ... against any party to the suit. It becomes evidence only as it may affect the character and credit of the witness, which may be affected by his antecedent declarations, and by the motive, under which he made them; but, when once all...
Page 358 - Lords, the whole of the letter is made evidence. One of the reasons for the rule requiring the production of written instruments, is in order that the court may be possessed of the whole. If the course which is here proposed should be followed, the cross-examining counsel may put the court in possession only of a part of the contents of the written paper, and thus the court may never be in possession of the whole, though it may happen that the whole, if produced, may have an effect very different...