The Provincial Courts of New Jersey: With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... |
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With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... Richard Stockton Field. 1 OF THE NEW JERSEY HISTORICAL SOCIETY . VOLUME III .
With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... Richard Stockton Field. 1 OF THE NEW JERSEY HISTORICAL SOCIETY . VOLUME III .
Page vii
With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... Richard Stockton Field. PREFACE . THE following Paper was ... Bench and at the Bar , as to rescue from the past such scattered memo- rials of them as were in danger of perishing ...
With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... Richard Stockton Field. PREFACE . THE following Paper was ... Bench and at the Bar , as to rescue from the past such scattered memo- rials of them as were in danger of perishing ...
Page viii
With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... Richard Stockton Field. have confined my researches therefore entirely to our Pro- vincial Courts , and Colonial judges and lawyers are the only ones whose characters I have attempted ...
With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... Richard Stockton Field. have confined my researches therefore entirely to our Pro- vincial Courts , and Colonial judges and lawyers are the only ones whose characters I have attempted ...
Page ix
With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... Richard Stockton Field. The cherishing the memory of our distinguished men . fault is our own . We have never been true to ourselves . We have suffered the brightest names in our ...
With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... Richard Stockton Field. The cherishing the memory of our distinguished men . fault is our own . We have never been true to ourselves . We have suffered the brightest names in our ...
Page 3
With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... Richard Stockton Field. less to excite , will yet be found to possess a pre- sent and an enduring interest . In truth , the great end for which all government is instituted , is ...
With Sketches of the Bench and Bar : a Discourse ... Richard Stockton Field. less to excite , will yet be found to possess a pre- sent and an enduring interest . In truth , the great end for which all government is instituted , is ...
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Common terms and phrases
Act of Parliament administration Amboy Attorney Bench Bergen Burlington Cape-May Causes charge Chief Justice Colonies Commission Commissioners for Trade Constable Constitution Cornbury's Coun Council County Courts Court of Chancery Court of Common Court of Judicature Court of Sessions Court-house Daniel Coxe Declaration Defendant East Elizabethtown England Execution Forty Shillings fourth Monday fourth Tuesday Freehold Government Governor Hunter Grand Jury Grants and Concessions held hereby further Ordain House Impowered Indictment Inhabitants James Kinsey Jeremiah Basse Judges Judgment land lawyers Lewis Morris Lord Cornbury Loving Subjects Mompesson Morris Newark Ordain and Direct Peace Penn Pennsylvania Perth-Amboy Pinhorne Proprietors Province of New-Jersey Province of Nova-Cæsarea publick Quakers Reign respective County Robert Hunter Morris Salem says second Monday second Tuesday Smith's N. J. Supreme Court thereof third Monday third Tuesday thought fit Thursday next ensuing tion Trade and Plantations vince West Jersey Whereas William York
Popular passages
Page 247 - Our Will and Pleasure is, that the Persons thereupon duly elected, by the Major part of the Freeholders of the respective Counties and Places so returned, and having before sitting, taken the Oaths appointed by Act of Parliament to be taken instead of the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy...
Page 216 - ... you are also, as much as possible, to observe in the passing of all laws, that whatever may be requisite upon each different matter, be accordingly provided for, by a different law, without intermixing in one and the same act, such things, as have no proper relation to each other ; and you are more especially to take care, that no clause or clauses be inserted in, or annexed to any act, which shall be foreign to what the title of such respective act imports...
Page 168 - I am not worth purchasing; but such as I am, the king of Great Britain is not rich enough to do it.
Page 109 - Equity is a roguish thing ; for law we have a measure, know what to trust to ; equity is according to the conscience of him that is Chancellor, and as that is larger or narrower, so is equity. 'Tis all one as if they should make the standard for the measure we call a foot...
Page 250 - Fines or Forfeitures due unto Us, fit Objects of Our Mercy, to pardon all such Offenders...
Page 22 - This study renders men acute, inquisitive, dexterous, prompt in attack, ready in defence, full of resources. In other countries the people, more simple and of a less mercurial cast, judge of an ill principle in government only by an actual grievance. Here they anticipate the evil and judge of the pressure of the grievance by the badness of the principle. They augur misgovernment at a distance, and snuff the approach of tyranny in every tainted breeze.
Page 247 - Council, any three whereof We do hereby appoint to be a Quorum; Our Will and Pleasure is, that you signify the same unto us by the first opportunity, that We may under Our Signet and Sign Manual constitute and appoint others in their Stead. But that Our Affairs may not suffer at that Distance, for Want of a due Number of Councillors...
Page 235 - AND you are to take especial care, that a Table of Marriages, established by the Canons of the Church of England...
Page 234 - England. 70. You shall be careful that the churches already built there, be well and orderly kept, and that more be built, as the colony shall by God's blessing be improved; and that besides a competent maintenance to be assigned to the minister of each orthodox church, a convenient house be built at the common charge for each minister, and a competent proportion of land assigned to him, for a glebe and exercise of his industry.
Page 251 - God, them to vanquish, apprehend, and take, and being taken either according to Law to put to Death or keep and preserve alive at your Discretion and to execute martial Law in Time of Invasion...