With all due deference to the author of the case,* I am now satisfied there is no foundation for his territorial principle. It certainly does not now exist, and no man living can say when it did. It clearly must have ceased before 1214, when lands came... History of the Partition of the Lennox - Стр. 113авторы: Mark Napier - 1835 - Страниц: 256Полный просмотр - Подробнее о книге
| Mark Napier - 1880 - Страниц: 262
...out his celebrated heterodox dictum, viz., — " With all due deference to the author of the case,* I am now satisfied there is no foundation for his...But it was more than two centuries after the date here assigned as the period when territorial honours ceased that John . Lord Dernely, and his son Mathew... | |
| Mark Napier - 1880 - Страниц: 196
...out his celebrated heterodox dictum, viz., — " With all due deference to the author of the case,* I am now satisfied there is no foundation for his...But it was more than two centuries after the date here assigned as the period when territorial honours ceased that John Lord Dernely, and his son Mathew... | |
| James Maidment - 1882 - Страниц: 142
...whether we should not allow the counsel to speak to it. With all due deference to the author of the case, I am now satisfied there is no foundation for his...in commercio, and adjudication went against them. When the comitatus did not carry the honour, a charter ought to be held only a conveyance of the estate.... | |
| William Oxenham Hewlett - 1882 - Страниц: 232
...whether we should not allow the counsel to speak to it. With all due deference to the author of the case, I am now satisfied there is no foundation for his...not now exist, and no man living can say when it did exist. It clearly must have ceased before 1214, when lands came in commcrdo, and adjudication went... | |
| William Oxenham Hewlett - 1882 - Страниц: 232
...territorial principle. It certainly does not now exist, and no man living can say when it did exist. It clearly must have ceased before 1214, when lands...in commercio, and adjudication went against them. When the comitatus did not carry the honour, a charter ought to be held only a conveyance of the estate.... | |
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