British Ruling Cases from Courts of Great Britain, Canada, Ireland, Australia and Other Divisions of the British Empire, Extensively Annotated, Volume 6

Capa
Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company, 1917
"This series of reports is in a sense a continuation, but with a decided expansion, of the plan of the English ruling cases, as it takes the cases from the British empire, instead of from England only, but it continues the English ruling cases in the sense that it will include the most important cases from the English courts decided since that series terminated."--Pref.
 

Outras edições - Ver tudo

Palavras e frases frequentes

Passagens conhecidas

Página 722 - copyright " means the sole right to produce or reproduce the work or any substantial part thereof in any material form whatsoever, to perform, or in the case of a lecture to deliver, the work or any substantial part thereof...
Página 386 - And there is great reason and justice in this rule, for necessitous men are not, truly speaking, free men, but to answer a present exigency will submit to any terms that the crafty may impose upon them.
Página 184 - The business of life could not go on if people could not trust those who are put into a position of trust for the express purpose of attending to details of management.
Página 191 - Perhaps the shortest way of expressing the distinction which I am endeavouring to explain is to say that fixed capital may be sunk and lost, and yet that the excess of current receipts over current payments may be divided, but that floating or circulating capital must be kept up, as otherwise it will enter into and form part of such excess, in which case to divide such excess without deducting the capital which forms part of it will be contrary to law.
Página 445 - Appeal were right, and that this appeal should be allowed with costs here and in the Court of Appeal, and that the order of the Divisional Court should be restored.
Página 830 - Dependents" means such of the members of the workman's family as were wholly or in part dependent upon the earnings of the workman at the time of his death, or would but for the incapacity due to the accident have been so dependent...
Página 505 - That an action will lie for written or oral falsehoods, not actionable per se nor even defamatory, where they are maliciously published, where they are Calculated in the ordinary course of things to produce, and where they do produce, actual damage, is established law.
Página 294 - Act until the termination of the present war, and shall thereafter deal with the same in such manner as His Majesty may by Order in Council direct.
Página 243 - Rnt it would be going much too far to say that so much care Is required In the ordinary Intercourse of life between one Individual and another that, if a machine not in its nature dangerous — a carriage, for instance — but which might become so by a latent defect entirely unknown, although discoverable by the exercise of ordinary care, should be lent or given by one person, even by the person who manufactured it, to another, the former should be answerable to the latter for a subsequent damage...
Página 404 - A man shall not have interest for his money, and a collateral advantage besides for the loan of it, or clog the redemption with any by-agreement.

Informação bibliográfica