Case was the great wisdom and policy of the sages and founders of our law, who have provided that no possibility, right, title, nor thing in action shall be granted or assigned to strangers, for that would be the occasion of multiplying of contentions... The Theory and Practice of Banking - Page 182de Henry Dunning Macleod - 1875Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Theophilus Parsons - 1857 - 936 pages
...our law have provided, that no possibility, right, title, nor thing in action, shall bu granted or assigned to strangers, for that would be the occasion...of great oppression, of the people, and chiefly of terre-tenants, and the subversion of the due and equal execution of justice." At what time this doctrine,... | |
| Ontario, Alexander Leith - 1869 - 536 pages
...of our law have provided that no possibility, right, title, 'or thing in action, shall be granted or assigned to strangers, for that would be the occasion...of great oppression of the people, and chiefly of terre-tenants, and the subversion of the due and equal execution of justice." To this rule the King... | |
| Henry Dunning Macleod - 1872 - 712 pages
...multiplying contentions and suits, of great oppression to the people and chiefly of terre-tenants, and the subversion of the due and equal execution...repeated a multitude of times by a long line of judges, both at Law and in Equity, usually with the qualification omitted, so that it has been made to appear... | |
| Edmund Henry Turner Snell - 1872 - 640 pages
...have provided o£ 1 * Wl that no possibility, right, title, nor thing in action, shall be granted or assigned to strangers; for that would be the occasion...and suits, of great oppression of the people, and the subversion of the due and equal execution of justice." 8 J 2 K. ft J. 23. Lwxm, 7 C. & F. 772;... | |
| Theophilus Parsons - 1876 - 856 pages
...Perry r. Jones, 1 H. Bl. 30. " No possibility, right, title, nor thing in action shall be granted or assigned to strangers, for that would be the occasion of multiplying of contentions and suits." Per Lord Coke. Sampet's case, 10 R. 48. And again, in his commentaries on Littleton, he savs that it... | |
| John Barbee Minor - 1877 - 1150 pages
...of our law have provided that no possibility, right, title, nor thing in action, shall he granted or assigned to strangers; for that would be the occasion...and suits, of great oppression of the people, and the subversion of the due and equal execution of justice," (Lam* pet's Case, 10 Co. 48 a) ; yet in... | |
| Frederick Thomas White, Owen Davies Tudor - 1877 - 1278 pages
...our law, who have provided that no possibility, right, title or thing in action, shall be granted or assigned to strangers, for that would be the occasion...of multiplying of contentions and suits, of great oppressions of the people, chiefly of terre tenants, and the subversion of the due and equal administration... | |
| George Pitt-Lewis - 1880 - 1064 pages
...law, is stated by Lord Coke in the following words : " For that would be the occasion of multiplicity of contentions and suits, of great oppression of the people, and chiefly of terre-tenants, and the subversion of the due and equal execution of justice " (q). "The Judicature... | |
| Henry Dunning Macleod - 1881 - 452 pages
...in-action, shall be granted and assigned to " strangers " : for that would be the occasion of multiplying contentions and suits, of great oppression of the...Lord Coke's qualification of a ' stranger ' may mean, his dictum has been repeated a multitude of times by along line of judges both at law and in equity,... | |
| Arthur Underhill - 1884 - 516 pages
...other legal choses in action, were not assignable at law on the ground (as put by Lord Coke) that it '' would be the occasion of multiplying of contentions...and suits, of great oppression of the people, and the subversion of the due and equal execution of justice" (10 Co. 48). But even at law negotiable instruments... | |
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