And whereas a failure of justice often takes place on the trial of persons charged with felony and misdemeanor by reason of variances between the statement in the indictment on which the trial is had and the proof of names, dates, matters, and circumstances... The Lancaster Law Review - Page 4101914Full view - About this book
| Solomon Atkinson - Real property - 1833 - 160 pages
...which the trial is had, of contracts, customs, prescriptions, names, and other matters or circumstances not material to the merits of the case, and by the mis-statement of which the opposite party cannot have been prejudiced, and the same cannot in any case be amended... | |
| William Tidd - Civil procedure - 1833 - 440 pages
...the trial was had, of contracts, customs, prescriptions, names, and other matters or circumstances, not material to the merits of the case, and by the mis-statement of which the opposite party could not have been prejudiced, and the same could not in any case be amended... | |
| England, Great Britain - Justice, Administration of - 1834 - 254 pages
...trial is had, of con- cases. tracts, customs, prescriptions, names, and other matters or circumstances not material to the merits of the case, and by the misstatement of which the opposite party cannot have been prejudiced, and the same cannot in any case be amended... | |
| Great Britain. Court of King's Bench, John Leycester Adolphus, Thomas Flower Ellis - Law reports, digests, etc - 1835 - 1060 pages
...which the trial is had, of contracts, customs, prescriptions, names, and other matters or circumstances not material to the merits of the case, and by the mis-statement of which the opposite party cannot have been prejudiced, and the same cannot in any case be amended... | |
| William Tidd - Civil procedure - 1837 - 720 pages
...the trial was had, of contracts, customs, prescriptions, names, and other matters or circumstances, not material to the merits of the case, and by the misstatement of which the opposite party could not have been prejudiced, and the same could not in any case be amended... | |
| Joseph Chitty, Thomas Chitty - Forms (Law) - 1837 - 860 pages
...had, of contracts, customs, prescriptions, names, Ыи са»м. and other matters or circumstances not material to the merits of the case, and by the mis-statement of which the opposite party cannot have been prejudiced, and the same cannot in any case be amended... | |
| Thomas George Western, Jean Louis de Lolme - Constitutional law - 1838 - 628 pages
...which the trial is had, of contracts, customs, prescriptions, names, and other matters or circumstances not material to the merits of the case, and by the mis-statement of which the opposite party cannot have been prejudiced, and the same cannot in any case be amended... | |
| Samuel March Phillipps - Evidence (Law) - 1838 - 1358 pages
...which the trial is had, of contracts, customs, prescriptions, names, and other matters or circumstances not material to the merits of the case, and by the mis-statement of which the opposite party cannot have been prejudiced, and the same cannot in any case be amended... | |
| John Frederick Archbold - Civil procedure - 1838 - 682 pages
...trial is to be bad, of contracts, customs, prescriptions, names, and other matters or circumstances not material to the *merits of the case, and by the misstatement of which the opposite party cannot have been prejudiced, and the same cannot in any case be amended... | |
| Great Britain - 1840 - 976 pages
...the Trial is had, of Contracts, ' Customs, Prescriptions, Names, and other Matters or Circum' stances not material to the Merits of the Case, and by the ' Mis-statement of which the opposite Party cannot have been ' prejudiced, and the same cannot in any Case be amended... | |
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