Lordships — which was unnecessary, but there are many whom it may be needful to remind — that an advocate, by the sacred duty which he owes his client, knows, in the discharge of that office, but one person in the world, THAT CLIENT AND NONE OTHER.... Littell's Living Age - Стр. 3051850Полный просмотр - Подробнее о книге
 | 1979 - Страниц: 442
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 | Henry Wynans Jessup - 1986 - Страниц: 456
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 | Jochen Taupitz - 1991 - Страниц: 1690
...hierzu Lord Brougham vor dem House of Lords 1820, hier zit. nach Rogers, 15 LQRev. 259, 269 (1899): „An advocate, by the sacred duty which he owes his...client at all hazards and costs to all others, and amongst others to himself - is the highest and most unquestioned of his duties; and he must not regard... | |
 | Samuel Haber - 1991 - Страниц: 504
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 | Robert L. Nelson, David M. Trubek, Rayman L. Solomon - 1992 - Страниц: 316
...lawyering Lord Brougham's famously exorbitant statement in his criminal defense of Queen Caroline: "[A]n advocate, by the sacred duty which he owes his...person in the world, that client and none other." This view is upheld in the preamble to the American Lawyers' Code of Conduct in passages that reaffirm... | |
 | Alan M. Dershowitz - 1997 - Страниц: 286
...Nor is this a radical or modern notion. As a British barrister named Henry Brougham put it in 1820: An advocate, by the sacred duty which he owes his...is the highest and most unquestioned of his duties; and he must not regard the alarm, the suffering, the torment, the destructions which he may bring upon... | |
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