Lectures on the Early History of InstitutionsJ. Murray, 1875 - 412 pagina's |
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Pagina 39
... Courts of Justice ; and besides that , why should not the man attempted to be distrained upon constantly resist with success ? Doubtless the law provides penalties for resistance ; but where is the ultimate sanction ? Cæsar supplies an ...
... Courts of Justice ; and besides that , why should not the man attempted to be distrained upon constantly resist with success ? Doubtless the law provides penalties for resistance ; but where is the ultimate sanction ? Cæsar supplies an ...
Pagina 42
... law was again parallel to that which there is strong reason for supposing the Roman law to have followed in ... Courts of Justice enforcing rights and duties in conformity with such opinion . ' LECT . II . IRISH AND ENGLISH LAW . 43.
... law was again parallel to that which there is strong reason for supposing the Roman law to have followed in ... Courts of Justice enforcing rights and duties in conformity with such opinion . ' LECT . II . IRISH AND ENGLISH LAW . 43.
Pagina 43
... Courts of Justice ; and it is at least a tenable view that the institutions which stood in the place of Courts of Justice only exercised jurisdiction through the voluntary submission of intending litigants . Perhaps , however , from our ...
... Courts of Justice ; and it is at least a tenable view that the institutions which stood in the place of Courts of Justice only exercised jurisdiction through the voluntary submission of intending litigants . Perhaps , however , from our ...
Pagina 47
Henry Sumner Maine. LECT . II . ENGLISH CASE - LAW . 47 by English writers on law that the method of enuncia- ting legal principles with which our Courts of Justice have familiarised us is absolutely peculiar to England and to ...
Henry Sumner Maine. LECT . II . ENGLISH CASE - LAW . 47 by English writers on law that the method of enuncia- ting legal principles with which our Courts of Justice have familiarised us is absolutely peculiar to England and to ...
Pagina 49
... law . I am afraid , however , that facts must always be the despair of the law reformer . Bentham seems to me ... Courts of Justice have chiefly to deal , are far obscurer and more intricately involved than the facts of physical ...
... law . I am afraid , however , that facts must always be the despair of the law reformer . Bentham seems to me ... Courts of Justice have chiefly to deal , are far obscurer and more intricately involved than the facts of physical ...
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Lectures on the Early History of Institutions, Volume 1875 Henry Sumner Maine Volledige weergave - 1875 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Analytical Jurists ancient Irish law Ancient Laws Aryan Aryan race assertion Austin authority become belonged Bentham body Book of Aicill Brahminical Brehon law Brehon tracts brotherhood Cæsar called cattle Celtic Celts Chief Christian Church commands communities conception consanguinity Courts of Justice custom descendants dharna distrain distraint doubt Druids Edition eldest England English law fact feudal Fuidhir Gavelkind Geilfine Hindoo law Hobbes ideas India influence institutions Joint Family jurisprudence King kinship kinsmen land Law of Distress law-tracts Laws of Ireland LECT Lectures legislation Lord Mitakshara modern MURRAY'S natural observe organisation origin Patria Potestas person political portion Post 8vo practice primitive Primogeniture principles probably race Roman Empire Roman law rules Salic Law Scottish Highlands seems Senchus Mor Sept society Sovereign Sovereignty succession supposed Tanistry tenants Teutonic theory tion tribal tribe tribesmen usage Village-Community whole writers
Populaire passages
Pagina 348 - If a determinate human superior, not in the habit of obedience to a like superior, receive habitual obedience from the bulk of a given society, that determinate superior is sovereign in that society...
Pagina 371 - Law, in its most general and comprehensive sense, signifies a rule of action ; and is applied indiscriminately to all kinds of action, whether animate or inanimate, rational or irrational.
Pagina 18 - It is a rule of right unwritten, but delivered by tradition from one to another, in which oftentimes there appeareth great show of equity, in determining the right between party and party, but in many things repugning quite both to God's law and man's...
Pagina 22 - It is better to do so," said Patrick. It was then that all the professors of the sciences in Erin were assembled, and each of them exhibited his art before Patrick, in the presence of every chief in Erin. It was then...
Pagina 300 - Notice precedes every distress in the case of the inferior grades, except it be by persons of distinction or upon persons of distinction. Fasting precedes distress in their case. He who does not give a pledge to fasting is an evader of all ; he who disregards all things shall not be paid by God or man.
Pagina 359 - A despot with a disturbed brain is the sole conceivable example of such Sovereignty. The vast mass of influences, which we may call, for shortness, moral, perpetually shapes, limits, or forbids the actual direction of the forces of society by its Sovereign.
Pagina 322 - Also property which she may have acquired by inheritance, purchase, partition, seizure, or finding, are denominated by Menu, and the rest, woman's property.