| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, William Pyle Taunton - 1819 - 766 Seiten
...and man or beast sustaining harm, having no right to be there, no action will lie. Such was the case cited of the horse straying from the common, and falling...what he pleased with his own land, and next, that the 122 528 the Plaintiff could shew no right for the horse to be there ; and yet, that a horse might,... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, Peregrine Bingham - 1828 - 810 Seiten
...purely for mischief. The case of the pit dug on a common has been distinguished, on the ground that the owner had a right to do what he pleased with his own land, and the plaintiff could shew no right for the horse to be there. Those cases, therefore, do not apply to... | |
| Great Britain. Court of King's Bench, James Manning, Archer Ryland - 1832 - 676 Seiten
...in Deane v. Clayton (a), it must be observed, that his Lordship put it on these grounds, first, that the owner had a right to do what he pleased with his own land ; and next, that the party sustaining the harm or damage had no right to be there. It is clear, that a party may drain his... | |
| Great Britain. Courts - 1855 - 586 Seiten
...and man or beast sustaining harm, having no right to be there, no action will lie. Such was the case cited of the horse straying from the common, and falling...his own land, and next, that *the plaintiff could show no light for г..-.73 the horse to be there; and yet, that a horse might, in the night or day,... | |
| John Scott, Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas - 1860 - 568 Seiten
...and man or beast sustaining harm, having no right to be there, no action will lie. Such was the case cited, of the horse straying from the common and falling into the pit,(b) and in which it was determined that no action would lie, first, because the owner had a right... | |
| Robert Campbell - 1901 - 864 Seiten
...purely for mischief. The case of the pit dug on a common has been distinguished, on the ground that the owner had a right to do what he pleased with his own land, and the plaintiff could show no right for the horse to be there. Those cases, therefore, do not apply to... | |
| Francis Hermann Bohlen - 1925 - 1312 Seiten
...and man or beast sustaining harm, having no right to be there, no action will lie. Such was the case cited of the horse straying from the common, and falling...to do what he pleased with his own land, and next, ..ttiat. ihe plaintiff could shew no right for the horse to be there ; and yet, that a horse might,... | |
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