The Solicitors' Journal & Reporter, Volume 17

Capa
Law Newspaper Company, 1873

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Palavras e frases frequentes

Passagens conhecidas

Página 265 - Every share in any Company shall be deemed and taken to have been issued and to be held subject to the payment of the whole amount thereof in cash, unless the same has been otherwise determined by a contract duly made in writing and filed with the Registrar of Joint-Stock Companies at or before the issue of such shares.
Página 120 - All goods being, at the commencement of the bankruptcy, in the possession, order or disposition of the bankrupt, in his trade or business, by the consent and permission of the true owner, under such circumstances that he is the reputed owner thereof...
Página 284 - No sum due to any member of a Company, in his character of a member, by way of dividends, profits, or otherwise...
Página 305 - Demands in the nature of unliquidated damages arising otherwise than by reason of a contract or promise shall not be provable in bankruptcy...
Página 198 - Chancery ; such order may be made subject to such conditions as to persons, time, place, and mode of opening or inspection as the House or tribunal making the order may think expedient...
Página 36 - The Court may presume the existence of any fact which it thinks likely to have happened, regard being had to the common course of natural events, human conduct and public and private business, in their relation to the facts of the particular case.
Página 41 - English law books in two most important points. In the first place, our illustrations are never intended to supply any omission in the written law, nor do they ever, in our opinion, put a strain on the written law. They are merely instances of the practical application of the written law to the affairs of mankind. Secondly, they are cases decided not by the judges but by the legislature, by those who make the law, and who must know more certainly than any judge can know what the law is which they...
Página 36 - A fact is said to be proved when, after considering the matters before it, the Court either believes it to exist, or considers its existence so probable that a prudent man ought, under the circumstances of the particular case, to A fact is said to be disproved when, after consid„ ering the matters before it, the Court Disprove . either believes that it does not exist...
Página 133 - It extends to all communications made bona fide upon any subject-matter in which the party communicating has an interest, or in reference to which he has a duty, to a person having a corresponding interest or duty.
Página 106 - AB, of [name and description as above prescribed] and acknowledged himself [or severally acknowledged themselves] to owe to our sovereign lady the queen the sum of...

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