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... but even if the defendant was the owner of the wilk, he had an answer to it, for it had been laid down by the Lord Chief Justice Coleridge and Mr. Justice Matthews that a person who performed the actual physical act of selling was responsible, and not ...

Published: Friday 04 May 1900
Newspaper: Selby Times
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1084 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE YORKSHIRE POST. TUESDAY, JUXE SO. 1900

... accused will now have stand his trial. The proci'dure i* so rare that there has been no case of it since the time of Lord Chief Justice Coleridge. On Thursday, in the House of Commons, Sir Fortescue Flannery intends to ask the First Lord of the Admiralty series ...

Rock Drills Driven by Electric Power

... last 250 feet, and from which will step oat upon the saounit platform. QUEER ADVENTURES AND EXPERIENCES. The Late Lord Chief Justice Coleridge. Judges have often been accompanied on circuit their wives. The late Lord Chief Justice often took Lady Coleridge ...

Published: Saturday 01 September 1900
Newspaper: Sheffield Weekly Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 880 | Page: 17 | Tags: none

OUR “FIRST AID” HINT

... Those heads bad forgotten to pop under the coverlet when the gong sounded. * * * In the Assize Court. The late Lord Chief Justice Coleridge was once, while a judge circuit, trying an important case of right-of-way which came before the as&iaea Exeter ...

Published: Saturday 29 September 1900
Newspaper: Sheffield Weekly Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1443 | Page: 17 | Tags: none

NOTES ON CURRENT TOPICS

... years of life for both of them. Many of the visitors will also remember that it is not yet eighteen years since Lord Chief Justice Coleridge opened the new Courts of Justice, and that in the intervening time two Lord Chief Justices, two Masters of the ...

THE YORKSHIRE POST. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 37. 1900. NOTES ON CURRENT TOPICS,

... eleven. The mission which sat in 188 l» under the presidency largo number of names sent in this year i- partly f Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, with view to duo to the popularity of the leader and partly reducing too heavily staffed department, reconito ...

WITH H.M. JUDGES ON CIRCUIT

... should be extended to thirtysix hours—think nothing of sitting till 10-p.m. to get the business finished. The late Lord Chief Justice Coleridge once sat four consecutive days from 8-30 a.m. to 10-30 p.m. He took, as he always did, several prolonged naps; ...

Published: Saturday 02 March 1901
Newspaper: Yorkshire Gazette
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1103 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

BBAVDT the BRADFORD OBSER'

... immediate anmni'a- twenty-five year. ago. The chief .paaker the closing meeting wae no lea* duUnguished pcrioiiagc Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, who in most eloquent »tyl* the vain* knowledge. on* part of hi* address he re*ort«d practical and local application ...

Published: Friday 12 July 1901
Newspaper: Bradford Observer
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3100 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE NULL CORPORATION’S NEGOTIATIONS FOB THE DREOCEB’S NINE. RESOLUTION TO DNEOCf AT WHITBY RESCIHOKD

... elapsed that tbe agreement was signed. It had been decided, over and again, and himself remembered bearing tbe late Lord Chief Justice Coleridge state that an agreement was an agreement whether in writing or not, ho long it could proved. In his opinion, in ...

Published: Friday 11 October 1901
Newspaper: Whitby Gazette
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3385 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

ABOUT LORD ROSEBERY

... personage in private life. I borrow the word beautiful from Mr. Bright, who used it to describe the oratory of the late Lord Chief Justice Coleridge. Lord Rosebery has manner, voice, an address, and an expression (when he drops the mask of bored indifference he ...

Published: Saturday 11 January 1902
Newspaper: Sheffield Weekly Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1804 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

BEFORE THE BENCH TO-DAY

... ' after Sir Henry Bennett purchased Thorpe Hall, what was known as the Thorpe Hall pew case was argued before Lord Chief Justice Coleridge. Mr Fytche was a witness, and Sir Henry h;id judgment given his favour, thus securing the ' freehold of the pew ...

Published: Wednesday 19 February 1902
Newspaper: Hull Daily Mail
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 803 | Page: 4 | Tags: none