Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 21 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 5142 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 67 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Mr. 7 Court 6 man 6 law 5 State 5 Law 5 Act 4 New 4 Judge 4 Jersey 4 Henry 4 England 3 roman 3 english 3 Supreme 3 Parliament 3 Justice 3 John 2 work 2 right 2 property 2 person 2 order 2 individual 2 history 2 greek 2 copyright 2 author 2 York 2 William 2 United 2 Tables 2 States 2 St. 2 Sir 2 Review 2 Lord 2 III 2 God 2 English 2 Edward 2 Congress 2 Commons 2 Church 1 year 1 worship 1 wife 1 web 1 truth 1 time Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 5081 law 2518 right 2357 case 2007 man 1805 copyright 1563 time 1529 property 1488 work 1404 person 1224 marriage 1205 court 1170 year 1169 book 1106 party 979 part 925 fact 890 power 885 author 847 rule 843 contract 815 form 812 action 811 people 793 act 774 thing 767 jury 765 question 763 way 742 order 740 word 732 defendant 696 king 687 justice 678 theory 669 day 657 use 655 country 649 government 638 judge 626 matter 625 principle 617 system 611 land 607 p. 594 place 586 state 570 wife 568 plaintiff 558 idea 557 reason Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 18775 _ 1122 Act 970 Mr. 877 . 861 Law 704 Court 694 L. 613 c. 538 C. 499 Rep. 499 R. 473 J. 451 United 436 B. 391 England 390 S. 386 D. 378 Fed 361 States 333 Copyright 330 New 300 Lord 287 N. 282 Ch 245 pl 241 State 241 Magna 240 Vict 231 Carta 230 Mrs. 227 sec 225 Congress 212 John 211 Book 200 /2/ 198 Judge 198 IV 198 English 192 King 192 I. 190 T. 188 Parliament 187 Justice 187 Charles 184 Henry 180 William 176 Acts 173 St. 172 Edward 165 Y.B. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 11128 it 4980 he 3445 they 2642 i 2246 we 1914 them 1678 him 978 you 709 she 550 us 539 himself 514 itself 475 me 417 themselves 388 her 274 one 64 herself 59 ourselves 46 myself 31 mine 21 ''em 20 yourself 12 theirs 12 his 7 ours 6 yours 6 ye 6 oneself 6 meself 5 em 5 ''s 3 thee 2 yourselves 1 yerself 1 themselves,--they 1 rather-- 1 ourself 1 often?--what 1 oats_--they 1 ne 1 iddat.--this 1 ib 1 http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/78d9812a-2386-11d9-aee5-00000e2511c8 1 hers 1 hear,--they 1 h.?--you 1 e52 1 another,--may 1 act,2 1 99/1 Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 42515 be 10804 have 3454 do 2598 make 2319 say 1649 take 1593 give 1298 see 929 hold 897 find 829 know 811 come 804 publish 794 go 747 think 739 use 717 call 710 seem 686 require 670 follow 655 become 631 show 518 apply 503 bring 493 get 482 put 480 provide 473 protect 450 pay 450 appear 448 write 431 accord 428 consider 426 grant 424 allow 398 pass 394 bind 393 leave 378 mean 374 produce 370 entitle 367 keep 360 exist 355 perform 353 suppose 349 print 327 obtain 303 tell 294 cause 293 look Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7734 not 2357 such 2252 other 2101 so 1771 only 1716 more 1458 same 1391 first 1047 legal 999 even 993 also 929 own 898 as 892 then 891 very 888 common 853 great 847 well 819 most 719 much 717 up 715 new 709 now 682 roman 664 out 638 however 636 good 623 many 609 far 604 public 593 certain 568 still 559 thus 555 general 538 therefore 531 old 505 natural 497 long 491 true 479 necessary 475 different 473 free 442 little 442 early 441 civil 432 intellectual 430 just 404 less 389 here 385 never Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 293 least 229 most 136 good 89 great 67 early 49 high 46 eld 29 old 28 manif 23 Most 19 simple 19 late 17 slight 17 near 17 bad 16 strong 16 low 14 large 13 young 11 small 10 wide 8 common 6 fine 6 deep 4 weak 4 short 4 safe 4 noble 4 full 3 wise 3 pure 3 new 3 narrow 3 loud 3 long 3 harsh 3 hard 3 farth 3 broad 3 big 3 able 2 true 2 sure 2 strange 2 sharp 2 scanty 2 rich 2 quick 2 mean 2 loose Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 590 most 64 least 40 well 3 ¦ 1 worst 1 soon 1 shortest 1 publication,--the 1 oftenest 1 long 1 lest 1 close Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.cptech.org 3 xkcd.com 3 www.law.duke.edu 3 en.wikipedia.org 2 www.washingtonpost.com 2 www.raycharles.com 2 www.oecd.org 2 www.law.upenn.edu 2 www.isaaa.org 2 www.gactv.com 2 www.eff.org 2 settlet.fateback.com 2 papers.ssrn.com 2 memory.loc.gov 2 home.earthlink.net 2 blogcritics.org 1 www.wm.edu 1 www.vecam.org 1 www.technologyreview.com 1 www.slyck.com 1 www.slashdot.org 1 www.shirky.com 1 www.serci.org 1 www.rufuspollock.org 1 www.pubpat.org 1 www.publicknowledge.org 1 www.publications.parliament.uk 1 www.psi.gov.ie 1 www.openrightsgroup.org 1 www.nytimes.com 1 www.nd.edu 1 www.nber.org 1 www.museum.tv 1 www.macfound.org 1 www.indopedia.org 1 www.iie.com 1 www.hm-treasury.gov.uk 1 www.hm- 1 www.gnu.ai.mit.edu 1 www.ft.com 1 www.fsf.org 1 www.ensembl.org 1 www.econlib.org 1 www.dvdcca.org 1 www.dfc.org 1 www.desktoplinux.com 1 www.creativecommons.org 1 www.copysouth.org 1 www.constitution.org 1 www.boingboing.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp- 2 http://www.raycharles.com/the_man_biography.html 2 http://www.isaaa.org/Briefs/20/briefs.htm 2 http://www.gactv.com/gac/ar_artists_a- 2 http://settlet.fateback.com/COL30000.htm 2 http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/jefferson_papers/mtjser1 2 http://home.earthlink.net/~v1tiger/jammuppvol2.html 2 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/urban_contemporary_gospel 2 http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/12/17/032826.php: 1 http://xkcd.com/c86.html 1 http://xkcd.com/c14.html 1 http://xkcd.com/c129.html 1 http://www.wm.edu/law/publications/jol/95_96/hardy.html 1 http://www.vecam.org/ijumelage/spip.php?article609 1 http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/ 1 http://www.slyck.com/news.php?story=733 1 http://www.slashdot.org 1 http://www.shirky.com/herecomeseverybody/2008/02/supernova-talk- 1 http://www.serci.org/docs_1_2/waelbroeck.pdf 1 http://www.rufuspollock.org/economics/p2p_summary.html 1 http://www.pubpat.org/ 1 http://www.publicknowledge.org/ 1 http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200607/cmselect/cmcum 1 http://www.psi.gov.ie/ 1 http://www.openrightsgroup.org/ 1 http://www.oecd.org/document/48/0,3343,en_2649_201185_40046832_1 1 http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/1/35/34455306.pdf 1 http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/25/magazine/25COPYRIGHT.html?ex=1 1 http://www.nd.edu/~histast4/exhibits/papers/Freiburger/ 1 http://www.nber.org/papers/w6956 1 http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/B/htmlB/betamaxcase/ 1 http://www.macfound.org/site/c.lkLXJ8MQKrH/b.943331/k.DA6/Genera 1 http://www.law.upenn.edu/polk/dropbox/waldfogel.pdf 1 http://www.law.upenn.edu/bll/archives/ulc/ucita/2002final.htm 1 http://www.law.duke.edu/journals/dltr/articles/PDF/2004DLTR0009 1 http://www.law.duke.edu/cspd/pdf/cspdproposal.pdf 1 http://www.law.duke.edu/cspd/pdf/cspdorphanfilm.pdf 1 http://www.indopedia.org/Eric_Corley.html 1 http://www.iie.com/publications/papers/paper.cfm?ResearchID=351 1 http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/media/B/4/gowers_ 1 http://www.hm- 1 http://www.gnu.ai.mit.edu/philosophy/free-sw.html 1 http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/78d9812a-2386-11d9-aee5-00000e2511c8 1 http://www.fsf.org 1 http://www.ensembl.org 1 http://www.eff.org/wp/unintended- 1 http://www.eff.org/IP/ 1 http://www.econlib.org/Library/NPDBooks/Pigou/pgEW1.html 1 http://www.dvdcca.org/faq.html 1 http://www.dfc.org/dfc1/Learning_Center/about.html Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 61 _ see _ 24 law does not 12 law is not 11 law did not 11 marriage is also 11 marriage is not 9 man is not 8 book is not 7 copyright is not 7 law is justice 7 party is not 6 act does not 6 act is not 6 parties are free 5 act was not 5 case is not 5 cases are not 5 law has always 5 law was not 5 marriage took place 5 work is not 4 action does not 4 author does not 4 author was not 4 court has power 4 courts do not 4 facts are not 4 law has not 4 rights are not 3 _ is _ 3 _ is only 3 _ require _ 3 act had not 3 act is hereinafter 3 action did not 3 author is not 3 book was not 3 contract is not 3 contract is void 3 copyright did not 3 copyright does not 3 courts are not 3 facts are true 3 law had not 3 man is also 3 man is answerable 3 marriage was not 3 men are equal 3 parties are not 3 parties is essential Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 act is not enough 2 law is no excuse 2 parties were not lawfully 1 _ had no footing 1 _ has no _ 1 _ have not _ 1 _ is not classical 1 act has no condition 1 act has no determinate 1 act is not _ 1 act is not blameworthy 1 act was not repugnant 1 act was not unconstitutional 1 action does not necessarily 1 actions was not materially 1 acts have not effectually 1 author has no right 1 author have no copyright 1 author is not necessarily 1 author was not alone 1 book had no title 1 book is not conclusive 1 book is not less 1 book is not merely 1 book is not publication 1 book is not wholly 1 books are not absolutely 1 books are not temptations 1 books were not commendable 1 case is not culpable 1 case was no doubt 1 case went no further 1 cases are not likely 1 cases are not satisfactory 1 cases are not so 1 contract is not voidable 1 contracts are not void 1 copyright did not necessarily 1 copyright has no right 1 court had no authority 1 court had no jurisdiction 1 court has no power 1 court saw no threat 1 court was not prepared 1 courts are not all 1 courts did no more 1 courts do not normally 1 courts had no power 1 courts were not only 1 facts are not always A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 44800 author = Bastiat, Frédéric title = The Law date = keywords = Government; Louis; Mr.; State; force; law; liberty; man; plunder summary = rights of "individuality, liberty, property." "This is man," he wrote. Far from protecting individual rights, the law was increasingly protected individual rights to life, liberty, and property. It is not because men have made laws, that personality, liberty, and property exist beforehand, that men make laws. liberty, and his property, a number of men have the right to combine lawfulness, in individual right; and the common force cannot rationally organization of the natural right of lawful defense; it is the But the law is made, generally, by one man, or by one class of men. political rights; either they may wish to put an end to lawful plunder, In fact, if law were confined to causing all persons, all liberties, and social problem, is contained in these simple words--LAW IS ORGANIZED When law and force keep a man within the bounds of justice, they impose id = 27526 author = Boyle, James title = The Public Domain: Enclosing the Commons of the Mind date = keywords = Act; Amendment; Charles; Commons; Congress; Court; DMCA; Intellectual; Jefferson; Journal; Judge; Kaplan; Law; Macaulay; Mr.; Napster; New; Press; Public; Ray; Review; Sony; States; Supreme; U.S.; United; University; Warning; West; York; chapter; copyright; internet; property; web; work summary = intellectual property right is necessary, this point is solved limited monopoly called an intellectual property right. intellectual property rights for the digital world was about as copying costs approach zero, intellectual property rights must intellectual property rights allows control in ways that those property rights might do to limit my ability to make fair uses, property right to "turn off fair use" in copyrighted works because it gives copyright holders a new intellectual property to copyright holders an intellectual property right to exempt then the DMCA gives an entirely new intellectual property right whether the Congress has the power to add a new right of accessdenial to the intellectual property monopoly it is constructing, Intellectual property rights over digital technologies affect intellectual property rights, the ways that material is covered, intellectual property rights are useful as part of scientific some cases, intellectual property rights were simply id = 37368 author = Brandeis, Louis Dembitz title = The Right to Privacy date = keywords = Prince; case; law; property; publication; right summary = That the individual shall have full protection in person and in property rights recognized by the law of slander and libel are in their nature The common law secures to each individual the right of determining, entire profits arising from publication; but the common-law protection there is a publication; the common-law right is lost _as soon as_ there such a case, any right of property, in the narrow sense, would be drawn of future profits is not a right of property which the law ordinarily is the right to privacy, and the law has no new principle to formulate 1. The right to privacy does not prohibit any publication of matter Under this rule, the right to privacy is not invaded by any publication publications of private matters, as is afforded in the law of defamation depend entirely upon the common-law right of property." Lord Cottenham id = 1341 author = Cardozo, Benjamin N. (Benjamin Nathan) title = The Altruist in Politics date = keywords = Owen; man summary = still living were not in reality men at all." It is this spirit-the buried hopes and buried projects of the past, the doctrine of communism man''s activity is measured by the nearness of reward, it would hold up communism, by unduly exalting our altruistic impulses, proceeds upon a The year 1824 saw the rise of Owen''s little community of New Harmony, and the year of 1828 saw the community''s final disruption. into the spirit of self-renunciation that communism demands. name-animated by that hope, Owen passed the last thirty years of his But years now have passed since Owen lived; the second New Harmony has Puritans of old: "They entered the prison of socialism and had the key In almost every phase of life, this doctrine of political altruists is In a like figurative spirit, the followers of communism have the dwarfing of the individual man; and that not by the death of human id = 31504 author = Emery, Lucilius A. (Lucilius Alonzo) title = Concerning Justice date = keywords = Constitution; Massachusetts; Parliament; government; individual; justice; law; man; power; right; state summary = "De Legibus" he declared that men are born to justice; that right is The doctrine that the individual man has some rights by nature which individual rights were derived from nature rather than from the state natural rights came to be generally accepted by the people of the law and legislation is to secure to each individual the utmost liberty those liberties and rights; for, as already stated, justice consists an independent government, was the adoption of a declaration of rights to limit the powers of government over private rights and to protect Under our federal and state form of government the question naturally the constitutional rights of the individual citizen. the power and duty of the court to refuse effect to a state statute in of the constitutional rights of the individual against the government, upon the proposition that the constitutional rights of the people are id = 2449 author = Holmes, Oliver Wendell title = The Common Law date = keywords = A.D.; Bracton; Case; Co.; England; Hen; Henry; III; L.R.; Lecture; Lord; South Carolina; Southcote; VII; Y.B.; Year; english; german; law; roman; section summary = acts as by ordinary human laws are likely to happen in the course it was called, gave way to an action under the new law to enforce In such cases the law goes on a new principle, different from general theory of criminal liability, as it stands at common law. view, broadly stated, under the common law a man acts at his of those cases to trespasses against the person, lest the law such cases as presenting mixed questions of law and fact. follow, the act is generally wrong in the sense of the law. merely the principle of Southcote''s Case and the common law of like case, and Lord Holt stated the principle: "If a man takes out by the law exists in the case of a given person, he is said not one, the law gave the owner a writ of trespass on the case. id = 46060 author = Kant, Immanuel title = Of the Injustice of Counterfeiting Books From: Essays and Treaties on Moral, Political and various Philosophical Subjects date = keywords = author; editor summary = rights; or whether the book is instead a mere use of his works, which ownership rights of; Again: whether the editor transacts his business author''s to the public;** the editor can publish the said speech by work (the counterfeiter)--would manage the author''s business with one besides the editor to venture the publication of the author''s work, is to the public the ownership over the work of the author, does not the the published work counterfeited, the business of editor, where this right to another, i.e. to an authorized editor, without a contract with that authorized editor) is the counterfeiter, who then damages use it for the purpose of a business of the author''s with the public; Should the editor give out the author''s work, after his concept that the editor is transacting a business between the author business transaction with the public; he represents not that author, id = 43945 author = MacGillivray, Evan James title = A Treatise Upon the Law of Copyright in the United Kingdom and the Dominions of the Crown, and in the United States of America Containing a Full Appendix of All Acts of Parliament International Conventions, Orders in Council, Treasury Minute and Acts of Congress Now in Force. date = keywords = Act; Acts; Book; Congress; Convention; Council; Court; Fed; International; Kingdom; Majesty; Proprietor; SEC; States; United; Vict; author; british; copyright; order; person; sidenote; work summary = artistic work will be protected under the Literary Copyright Act, book will not be published within the meaning of the Copyright Act right to acquire copyright by first publication here in "book" form. a literary work claiming the protection of the Copyright Act, 1842, as _Engravings in a book_ are protected by the Copyright Act, 1842, as The following works are protected under the Fine Arts Copyright Act, the Copyright Acts in this country should apply to foreign works in infringement of his copyright unless each published copy of his work Acts of Congress establishing copyright in published work. securing the Copies and Copyright of Printed Books to the Authors of Authors of Books first published in Foreign Countries Copyright of to copy or use any Work in which there shall be no Copyright, or to of the said Work, and no Proprietor of any such Copyright shall be id = 22910 author = Maine, Henry Sumner, Sir title = Ancient Law: Its Connection to the History of Early Society date = keywords = Contract; Europe; Family; France; Gentium; Hindoo; Jus; Law; Maine; Natural; Nature; Patria; Potestas; Property; Prætor; Rome; State; Tables; Testament; Testamentary; english; greek; history; jurisprudence; roman summary = important an influence on the early Roman law of adoption and of decide the new cases by pure Roman Civil Law. They refused, no doubt effects of the theory of natural law on modern society, and indicates ought to be equal." The peculiar Roman idea that natural law coexisted In modern Testamentary jurisprudence, as in the later Roman law, the Now in the older theory of Roman Law the individual bore to the family generally in the language of ancient Roman law, it includes all be placed by one generation of Roman lawyers in the Law common to all ancient from the modern conception of Natural Law. The Roman lawyers descended from the Natural Law of the Romans, which differed The history of Roman Property Law is the existence in Roman Law of a form of property--a creation of Equity, it The theory of Natural law is exclusively Roman. id = 608 author = Milton, John title = Areopagitica A Speech for the Liberty of Unlicensed Printing to the Parliament of England date = keywords = Commons; God; Lords; Parliament; book; good; great; man; order; thing; truth summary = of his glory, when honourable things are spoken of good men and worthy gentle greatness, Lords and Commons, as what your published Order hath regulate printing:--that no book, pamphlet, or paper shall be henceforth a man as kill a good book. God''s image; but he who destroys a good book, kills reason itself, kills is to be thought in general of reading books, whatever sort they be, and is to be thought in general of reading books, whatever sort they be, and of books and dispreaders both of vice and error, how shall the licensers not willingly admit him to good books; as being certain that a wise man wisely as in this world of evil, in the midst whereof God hath placed that writings are, yet grant the thing to be prohibited were only books, perpetuity of praise which God and good men have consented shall be the id = 32168 author = Pound, Roscoe title = An Introduction to the Philosophy of Law date = keywords = Law; Review; american; anglo; century; english; greek; idea; individual; legal; liability; natural; roman; rule; social; theory summary = natural law behind the legal rule, which has been so fruitful both of Natural law was a philosophical theory for a period of growth. But the theory of natural law, devised for a society organized on the law of the time and place as the jural order of nature, were handed natural law, was not an ideal form of historically found principles, and the philosophical theory of a law of nature was called upon for a metaphysical theory of law as an idea of right or of liberty realizing attempt to state the law, or the legal institution of the time and law in order, a third element develops, which may be called legal Three theories of application of law obtain in the legal science of groups may be called: (1) Natural-law theories, (2) metaphysical that the common law is the legal order of nature, that its doctrines id = 35760 author = Ringrose, Hyacinthe title = Marriage and Divorce Laws of the World date = keywords = Act; Church; Civil; Code; Court; DIVORCE; England; Hindu; Mohammedan; State; causes; husband; law; marriage; party; wife; year summary = 1. Either party to the marriage is entitled to a divorce on the ground of A husband and wife contract together by the fact of marriage itself to female under 21 years of age requires the consent of her marriage marriage and divorce, and the State law contains certain provisions of marriage, the parties consenting to be divorced give notice of such EFFECTS OF DIVORCE.--If the guilty party is the wife, her husband has the system of marriage and divorce laws applicable to all the States and The laws of marriage and divorce in the various States and Territories former husband or wife of either party was living and the former marriage 9. That either party had a husband or wife living at the time of marriage. 9. If either party had another husband or wife at time of second marriage. years cannot contract a lawful marriage. id = 32984 author = Spooner, Lysander title = An Essay on the Trial by Jury date = keywords = Blackstone; Carta; Charter; Common; Edward; England; English; Footnote; Great; Henry; III; John; Law; Magna; Saxon; court; history; jury; king summary = of Common Law juries, in all cases, both civil and criminal, in which THE RIGHT OF JURIES TO JUDGE OF THE JUSTICE OF LAWS. THE RIGHT OF JURIES TO JUDGE OF THE JUSTICE OF LAWS. right and duty of juries to judge what are the facts, what is the law, had no power to judge of the justice of the laws the people were laws enacted by consent of king and people; and the power of raising _The Ancient Common Law Juries were mere Courts of Conscience._ The nature of the common law courts existing prior to Magna Carta, such judges impose no law upon the juries, in either civil or criminal cases, did not wish juries to take their law from the king''s judges. that the juries, in these cases, judged the matters of law, as well as law right of the people to sit as jurors, and judge of their own id = 59877 author = Various title = The New Jersey Law Journal, Volume XLV, No. 2, February, 1922 date = keywords = Act; Court; Jersey; Judge; Justice; Mr.; New; State; Supreme; York summary = member of the Supreme Court of the United States. case was tried before Judge Clifford in the Circuit Court of the United of the Supreme Court of the United States), were leading counsel for the I first saw and heard Judge Curtis at New Haven in 1864, in the trial of _New Trial--Rules of Supreme Court--Orders of Judges--Relaxation of should be heard before the trial Judge or before the Supreme Court. Judge evidently felt that the plaintiff should be given her day in Court expiration of the time), by order of the Court, or a Justice or a Judge Case of State of New Jersey against Joseph A. to the Court''s ruling by counsel for the defendant, no exception taken This railroad company received from the State of New Jersey a grant, by Speer, of Jersey City, Circuit Court Judge, before the United States Supreme Court. id = 60238 author = Various title = The New Jersey Law Journal, January, 1922 Vol. XLV. No. 1. Jan., 1922 date = keywords = Broad; City; Court; Jersey; Judge; Justice; Mr.; New; Newark; Parsons; School; St.; Supreme summary = the Court of Errors to order a new trial where the evidence seemed After three days of argument by lawyers in the Federal case in New York City concerning the intent of and Court decisions on the Sherman law School I was for a time a member of the New York Bar. As I went upstairs struggle with Judge Story, who held the United States Circuit Court, over a question under the Bankrupt Law. The facts are stated on pages one side of a Moot Court case before Professor Parker, sitting as Judge. A few days later, the young man said to him, "I have asked Judge Story was opening the Circuit Court of the United States at Salem, I said the date marked other great crises in our history, and take time Supreme Court Justice Bennet Van Syckel, almost ninety-two years old, Former New Jersey State Senator and former Supreme Court Judge of id = 60300 author = Various title = The New Jersey Law Journal, Volume XLV, No. 3, March 1922 date = keywords = Chancellor; Court; Dodd; Jersey; Judge; Justice; Mr.; New; State summary = decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of the Justice of the Supreme Court who held the Essex Circuit, was a man of Transfer--Right to Possession of Property--Uniform Conditional Sales recorded in accordance with the laws of the State of New Jersey and ... Second, as to the assignment of the conditional sale agreement: The New On the question of damages the Court said: "In the case in hand the _Criminal Abortion--New Trial--Postponing Sentence Days_. sentence thereafter to in a new term of the Court and without having expired, the power of the Court to fix a sentence day or impose a that the decision in that case represents the law of this State. clerk to make up a sentence list for said day; for the Court to use such the postponement and placing the case on the new sentence list of the id = 35783 author = Wight, J. (John) title = Mornings at Bow Street A Selection of the Most Humorous and Entertaining Reports which Have Appeared in the ''Morning Herald'' date = keywords = Bob; Brown; Dobbs; Henry; Jemmy; John; Miss; Molly; Mr.; Mrs.; Phelim; Sir; St.; Sullivan; Tom; William; come; honour; illustration; magistrate; man; worship summary = fad of his, please your worship," said the officer, "frightened the ladies "Sir," interrupted the magistrate, "you must satisfy me, as well as Mrs. Jinkins; you have broken the public peace; let me know what you have to but how very nice it was, who should come in but the defendant, Mrs. Evans, with an "I want to speak to _you_, young woman." Now she, Miss last Mrs. Evans opened the door of a house and said, "pray walk in, Mrs. Evans, having closed the door, made her a low courtesy, and said, "Have "Please your worship," said Mrs. Bunce, "I lives in Short''s Gardens, and "I admit it, your worship," said Mrs. Welldone, "but it was enough to make She was ordered to find bail for her appearance at the Sessions, and Mr. O''Flinn said he should certainly prosecute her; but the magistrate told id = 14783 author = nan title = The Twelve Tables date = keywords = B.C.; Cicero; Tables; law; person summary = Both (parties) shall appear in person and person], the solemn deposit (_sacramentum_) [shall be] 50 _asses_. thirty days shall be allowed by law [for payment or for 3. According as a person shall have ordered regarding his property or the guardianship (_tutela_) of his estate, so shall be the law (_ita 6. To persons[21] for whom a guardian (_tutor_) shall not have been vendor) shall undergo a penalty of double [damages].[24] shall have the right of action] for double [damages] against him who 8. If a water-course directed through a public place shall do damage persons'' trees shall pay 25 asses for every [tree]. If a person plead on case of theft, in which [the thief] shall not 1. Laws of personal exception (_privilegium_)[55] shall not be 2. [Laws] concerning the person (_caput_)[56] of a citizen shall not 1. A dead person shall not be buried or burned in the city.[59] id = 22746 author = nan title = The Copy/South Dossier Issues in the economics, politics, and ideology of copyright in the global South date = keywords = South summary = THE COPY/SOUTH DOSSIER Issues in the economics, politics, and ideology of copyright in the global South Edited by Alan Story Colin Darch and Debora Halbert Researched and published by The Copy/South Research Group This is marked as "Not Restricted by Copyright," which Project Gutenberg interprets as a grant to the public domain. Please see the RTF or PDF files for this eBook, which was downloaded in September 2007 from: http://www.copysouth.org id = 38589 author = nan title = Legal Lore: Curiosities of Law and Lawyers date = keywords = Act; Church; Court; Cross; Edward; England; English; Forest; God; Henry; Inn; James; Jersey; John; King; Law; Laws; Lord; Mr.; Parliament; Scotland; Sir; William; find; man; time summary = Sanctuaries probably served a useful purpose in ages when the law was of battel before the king, between the heir-at-law of the person murdered in the courts of law." The custom prevailed before the Conquest, ten men In ancient times the law laid great stress on the feudal possession or That Forest Laws of some kind or other existed in these far-off times may time, in contempt of the King and the law, and to the great terror and "The law of England," said the Recorder "will not allow you to part until numerous works dealing with the criminal laws of the olden time. year of Grace 1870, the punishment ordained by law for the crime of high men accounted most learned in the law were employed in the case. common-law sat as usual, the Lords of Manors held their courts, and the On the other hand, there are Courts of Law of almost