| Great Britain. Court of Chancery, Charles Beavan - 1846 - 766 pagina’s
...representations made by the party who knows, or is supposed to know, without any means of verification being resorted to by the other, it may well enough be presumed,...inference from something else, and if the parties making it, and receiving representations on the subject, have equal knowledge, and means of acquiring knowledge,... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Chancery, Charles Beavan - 1846 - 790 pagina’s
...representations made by the pai'iy who knows, or is supposed to know, without any means of verification being resorted to by the other, it may well enough be presumed,...inference from something else, and if the parties making it, and receiving representations on the subject, have equal knowledge, and means of acquiring knowledge,... | |
| Joseph Henry Dart - 1851 - 1234 pagina’s
...representations made by the party who knows, or is supposed to know, without any means of verification being resorted to by the other, it may well enough be presumed...better informed : but if the subject is, in its nature, uncertain,—if all that is known about it is matter of inference from something else, and if the parties... | |
| William Francis Finlason - 1855 - 668 pagina’s
...representations made by the party who knows, or is supposed to know, without any means of verification being resorted to by the other, it may well enough be presumed...inference from something else, and if the parties making it and receiving representations on the subject have equal knowledge and means of acquiring knowledge,... | |
| 1855 - 414 pagina’s
...representations made by the party who knows or is supposed to know, without any means of verification being resorted to by the other, it may well enough be presumed...inference from something else, and if the parties making it and receiving representations on the subject have equal knowledge and means of acquiring knowledge,... | |
| William Williamson Kerr - 1868 - 498 pagina’s
...representations made by the party who knows or is supposed to know, without any means of verification being resorted to by the other, it may well enough be presumed...that the ignorant man relied on the statements made to him by him who was supposed to be better informed (?•); but if the subject is 6 d. & Fin. 232;... | |
| Joseph Henry Dart - 1871 - 788 pagina’s
...be excluded. So, where the subject of the contract is in its nature Where it is uncertain, — where all that is known about it is matter of inference from something else, and the parties making and tion < receiving representations on the subject have equal knowledge and means... | |
| Charles Greenstreet Addison - 1876 - 762 pagina’s
...representations made by the party who knows, or is supposed to know, without any means of verification being' resorted to by the other, it may well enough be presumed...informed ; but if the subject is in its nature uncertain, if-all that is known about it is matter of inference from something else, and if the parties making... | |
| John Norton Pomeroy - 1879 - 682 pagina’s
...representations made by the party who knows, or is supposed to know, without any means of verification being resorted to by the other, it may well enough be presumed...that the ignorant man relied on the statements made to him by him who was supposed to be better informed ; but if the subject is in its nature uncertain... | |
| John Norton Pomeroy - 1882 - 844 pagina’s
...representations made by the party who knows, or is supposed to know, without any means of verification being resorted to by the other, it may well enough be presumed...that the ignorant man relied on the statements made to him by him who was supposed to be better informed; but if the subject is in its nature uncertain,... | |
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