| 1834 - 518 Seiten
...of Laws.) Lord Tenterden has laid down the same principle in bolder language. His language is, that a person suing in this country must take the law,...enjoy greater advantages than other suitors here. (De la Vega v. Vianna. 1 B. 8t Adol. 274.) He should not press upon our courts the strange and novel... | |
| 1830 - 1076 Seiten
...pursued by such means as the law points out where the parties reside. And we think, on consideration of the present case, that the distinction laid down...in his own country, enjoy greater advantages than (1) 1 Bos. & Pul. 138. f '-' i 2 Eaat, 453. (5) 3Ves.jun.447. other suitors here ; and he ought not,... | |
| John Bayly Moore, Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, John Scott - 1833 - 790 Seiten
...Cress. 903. (/i) 1 Barn. & Adolph. 2*4. tion laid down by Mr. Justice Heath (f) ought to prevail. 1834. A person suing in this country must take the law as...in his own country, enjoy greater advantages than the suitors here, and he ought not therefore to be deprived of any superior advantage which the law... | |
| 1834 - 522 Seiten
...of Laws.) Lord Tenterden has laid down the same principle in bolder language. His language is, that a person suing in this country must take the law,...cannot, by virtue of any regulation in his own country, enj°y greater advantages than other suitors here. (De la Vega v' Vianna. 1 B. &. Adol. 274.) He should... | |
| John Bayly Moore, Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, John Scott - 1834 - 784 Seiten
...Justice Heath (/) ought to prevail. 183lA person suing in this country must take the law as he TRIMBKY finds it : he cannot, by virtue of any regulation in his own • vJJ & VlONIER. country, enjoy greater advantages than the suitors here, and he ought not therefore... | |
| John Sidney Smith - 1842 - 766 Seiten
...(20 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 387.) " A person suing in this country," says Lord Tenterden, in this case, " must take the law as he finds it. He cannot, by virtue...be deprived of any superior advantage which the law ot this country may confer. He is to have the same rights, which all the subjects of this kingdom are... | |
| Edmund Robert Daniell - 1846 - 848 Seiten
...allow of arrest for debt. In the above case Lord Tenterden, CJ remarked, that a person suing in England must take the law as he finds it ; he cannot by virtue...country, enjoy greater advantages than other suitors in England, and he ought not therefore to be deprived of any superior advantage which the law of this... | |
| George Spence - 1850 - 930 Seiten
...them must be pursued by such means as the law of the country where the parties reside, points out. A person suing in this country, must take the law...advantages than other suitors here, and he ought not to be deprived of any superior advantage which the law of this country may confer (¿>): a Portuguese,... | |
| South Carolina. Court of Appeals, J. S. G. Richardson - 1851 - 704 Seiten
...not to the mode of enforcing it. In De La Vega vs. Vianna (1 B. & Ad. 284,) Lord Tenterden said : " A person suing in this country, must take the law as he finds it. He cannot, by any regulation of his own country, enjoy greater advantages than other suitors here. He is to have... | |
| 1853 - 524 Seiten
...the Court of King's Bench decided that the debtor might be arrested. Lord Tenterden, CJ, said — " A person suing in this country •must take the law...ought not, therefore, to be deprived of any superior advantages which the law of this country may confer. He is to have the same rights which all the subjects... | |
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