A Digest of the Law Concerning Libels: Containing All the Resolutions in the Books on the Subject, and Many Manuscript Cases |
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Page ix
... Thing is the Tranfcript ; and Rokeby faid the Words , to the Purport , were loose and useless Words ; and the Words , according to the Tenor , being of a certain and more ftri & Sig- nification , the Force of the latter was not hurt by ...
... Thing is the Tranfcript ; and Rokeby faid the Words , to the Purport , were loose and useless Words ; and the Words , according to the Tenor , being of a certain and more ftri & Sig- nification , the Force of the latter was not hurt by ...
Page xiii
... Thing with a mifchievous Intent , does it at his Peril . As to the Author's Defects , he doubts not Defects . but that the Candor of his Readers will fub- ftitute the Words of Horace on a fimilar Oc- cafion , in Excufe of them . Non ego ...
... Thing with a mifchievous Intent , does it at his Peril . As to the Author's Defects , he doubts not Defects . but that the Candor of his Readers will fub- ftitute the Words of Horace on a fimilar Oc- cafion , in Excufe of them . Non ego ...
Page 13
... Thing in Writing , which imported or 1. That eve- ry Thing in implied , or was generally understood to import or imply Reproach for Scandal , to any Perfon or Perfons whatsoe- which im- ver , was a Libel . ported Re- proach was a Libel ...
... Thing in Writing , which imported or 1. That eve- ry Thing in implied , or was generally understood to import or imply Reproach for Scandal , to any Perfon or Perfons whatsoe- which im- ver , was a Libel . ported Re- proach was a Libel ...
Page 16
... Things which they are afterwards afhamed of , and tho ' they feem to act with Deliberation , yet the Scandal fooner dies away and is forgotten ; and therefore from the greater Degree of Mischief and Malice attending the one than the ...
... Things which they are afterwards afhamed of , and tho ' they feem to act with Deliberation , yet the Scandal fooner dies away and is forgotten ; and therefore from the greater Degree of Mischief and Malice attending the one than the ...
Page 20
... Things ful Writers neceffary to the Constitution of a Libel , viz . the scanda lous Matter , and the Writing ; and it has the fame per- nicious Confequence , for it perpetuates the Memory of the Thing , and fome Time or other comes to ...
... Things ful Writers neceffary to the Constitution of a Libel , viz . the scanda lous Matter , and the Writing ; and it has the fame per- nicious Confequence , for it perpetuates the Memory of the Thing , and fome Time or other comes to ...
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A Digest of the Law Concerning Libels: Containing All the Resolutions in the ... No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
Advertiſement Affidavit againſt alfo Anſwer appear Attorney Bail Barnard becauſe Behaviour Breach Cafe Caufe Cauſe Chap charged committed Common Common Law Confequence convicted Counſel Crime Defendant diſcharged Eafter Term faid falfe fame fays fcandalous feditious Libel feems Felony feven feveral fhall fhew fhould fince fined fome Fortefc fuch fufficient guilty Hift Hilary Term himſelf Houfe Houſe imprifoned Indictment Information intituled Judges Judgment Juft Jury K. B. MSS King King's Bench laft Lord Chancellor Lord Chief Juftice Lord Coke Lords of Parliament Magiftrate ment Michaelmas Term Mifdemeanor muſt North Briton obferved Offence Outlawry Paper Parliament Party Peace Peer Perfon Pillory prefent Prifon printing and publiſhing Privilege Profecution punishable Puniſhment Queen Queſtion Raym Recognizance Rule Sentence Serjeant Sir Philip Yorke Star-Chamber Stra Sureties Term 5 Geo thefe theſe tion Treafon Trial Trinity Term viour Warrant Whitw Words Writ writing
Popular passages
Page 120 - That the freedom of speech, and debates or proceedings in Parliament, ought not to be impeached or questioned in any court or place out of Parliament.
Page 41 - Subject in Fear by Blows, Threats, or Geftures. Nor is this Cafe of the Libeller ever enumerated in any of thefe Writers among the Breaches of Peace ; on the contrary, it is always defcribed as an Act tending to excite, provoke, or produce Breaches of the Peace...
Page 123 - Eqs. : containing his secret Transactions and Negotiations in Scotland, England, the Courts of Vienna, Hanover, and other Foreign Parts. With an Account of the Rise and Progress of the Ostend Company in the Austrian Netherlands. Published by himself.
Page 49 - Thefe are in his majefty's name to authorize and require you to receive into your cuftody the body of John Wilkes, efq; herewith fent you for being the author and...
Page 42 - He is, by this Means, impowered, in the firft Inftance, to pronounce the Paper to be a feditious Libel, a Matter of fuch Difficulty, that fome have pretended, it is too high to be...
Page 104 - ... both in respect of the judges of the Court and of their honourable proceeding according to their just jurisdiction and the ancient and just orders of the court. For the judges of the same are (as you have heard) the grandees of the realm, the lord chancellor, the lord treasurer, the lord president of the King's Council, the lord privy seal, all the lords spiritual, temporal and others of the King's most honourable Privy Council and the principal judges of the realm, and such other lords of Parliament...
Page 7 - ... nonsense if strained to any other meaning, is as properly a libel as if it had expressed the whole name at large; for it brings the utmost contempt upon the law to suffer its justice to be eluded by such trifling evasions; and it is a ridiculous absurdity to say that a writing which is understood by every, the meanest, capacity, cannot possibly be understood by a judge and jury.
Page 16 - It is not material whether the libel be true, or whether the party against whom it is made, be of good or ill fame; for in a settled state of Government the party grieved ought to complain for every injury done him in an ordinary course of law, and not by any means to revenge himself, either by the odious course of libelling, or otherwise...
Page 52 - Ihewing that privilege of parliament is conufable at common law, he ' fays, that privilege generally holds, unlefs it be in three cafes, viz. treafon, felony, and the peace.
Page 51 - I fhould have thought it very weighty and alarming ; but it has been fettled. Before I mention the cafe where it Was folemnly adjudged, I would take notice, that neither my Lord Coiet Lord Hah, or Mr.