The Whole Proceedings Upon an Information Exhibited Ex Officio by the King's Attorney-General Against the Right Hon. Sackville Earl of Thanet, Robert Fergusson, Esquire and Others: For a Riot and Other Misdemeanors : Tried at the Bar of the Court of King's Bench, April 25, 1799R. Ogle, 1799 - 183 pagina's Defendants were accused of instigating a riot with intent of rescuring Arthur O'Connor from sheriff's custody. |
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Pagina
... Address of the Attorney - General , upon the Defendants being again brought up for Judgment on the 10th June 143 Speech of Mr. Juftice GROSE Sentence Some Obfervations GUSSON - 144 150 follow upon his own Cafe , by ROBERT FER- JURY ...
... Address of the Attorney - General , upon the Defendants being again brought up for Judgment on the 10th June 143 Speech of Mr. Juftice GROSE Sentence Some Obfervations GUSSON - 144 150 follow upon his own Cafe , by ROBERT FER- JURY ...
Pagina 9
... address you . Gentlemen , the trial at Maidstone was , as I need not tell thofe to whom I have the honour to addrefs myself , an extremely long one . The witnesses on both fides had been defired to with draw from the Court previous to ...
... address you . Gentlemen , the trial at Maidstone was , as I need not tell thofe to whom I have the honour to addrefs myself , an extremely long one . The witnesses on both fides had been defired to with draw from the Court previous to ...
Pagina 54
... address you - but for three of the Defendants only : because , though nothing could poffibly have feparated their cafes in argument , yet it was thought prudent not to embarrass the mind of any one advocate with fo many facts and ...
... address you - but for three of the Defendants only : because , though nothing could poffibly have feparated their cafes in argument , yet it was thought prudent not to embarrass the mind of any one advocate with fo many facts and ...
Pagina 64
... address to you , and the Judge was beginning to fum up to you , publicly begin or join in a fcene of noise and uproar , under the eyes of the Judges , as they now look at me - of the Officers , now fitting before me - of you , the Jury ...
... address to you , and the Judge was beginning to fum up to you , publicly begin or join in a fcene of noise and uproar , under the eyes of the Judges , as they now look at me - of the Officers , now fitting before me - of you , the Jury ...
Pagina 120
... address you upon pinciples which forbid him to have any zeal upon the subject .. The Attorney - General of the country , as i appears to me , has a public duty to execute , in reference to which be ought to conceive , that he has ...
... address you upon pinciples which forbid him to have any zeal upon the subject .. The Attorney - General of the country , as i appears to me , has a public duty to execute , in reference to which be ought to conceive , that he has ...
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The Whole Proceedings Upon an Information Exhibited Ex Officio by the King's ... William Ramsey Volledige weergave - 1799 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquitted addrefs affaulted affiftance aforefaid againſt anſwer aſk Attorney-General becauſe bench Bow-ftreet officers cafe circumftance Commiffioners confequence confufion Counſel Court cuftody defcribed Defendants defired Dennis O'Brien diſcharged diſturbance Earl of Thanet efcape endeavoured eſcape evidence faid Arthur O'Connor faid Lord fame faw Lord Thanet feat fecurity feen fentence Ferguffon Ferguson fhall fhould fide fituation fome fpeak ftanding ftate ftood ftrike ftruck fuch Fugion fuppofed fure fworn Gentlemen guilty Gunter Browne himſelf honour Juftice Buller Juftice Lawrence Jury Learned Friend Learned Judge Lord the King Lordship Maidſtone moft moſt muft muſt myſelf O'Brien O'Coigly O'Con obferved occafion paffed perfon poffibly pofitively prefent preffed prifoners purpoſe queftion reaſonable recollect refpect reſcue riot Rivett ROBERT FERGUSSON ſaid ſcene Serjeant Shepherd Sir Francis Burdett Solicitors ſtanding ſtate ſtick thefe theſe thing thofe Thompſon thoſe Treafon trial tumult underſtand verdict warrant whofe witneffes
Populaire passages
Pagina 6 - In contempt of our said Lord the King and his laws, to the evil example of all others in the like case offending, and against the peace of our said Lord the King, his crown and dignity.
Pagina 1 - April, in the twenty-third year of the reign of our sovereign lord George the Third, now King of Great Britain, and so forth, at Wrexham, in...
Pagina 94 - A. Mr. O'Coigly, Mr. Binns, and Mr. O'Connor ; Mr. O'Connor was on the left as he looked at the Judges, and on the right as they looked at him; Mr. Binns in the middle, and Mr. O'Coigly next the Gaoler; my seat was directly under the Gaoler, at the end of the seat.
Pagina 114 - O'Connor, was frightened, and said with great agitation to me, that they would kill O'Connor, and he jumped over the railing; he could not go from where we were without jumping upon the table, and he ran forward; Mr. Maxwell followed him, or went at the same time ; they both went towards Mr. O'Connor; I then saw very distinctly Mr. Fergusson stop sir Francis Burdett, and use some action, saying, "You had better keep away, and not come into the tumult at all :" I could not hear what he said, but it...
Pagina 100 - You have told us, that, during the whole day, Mr. Fergusson kept the same place ? A. As to the same place, I believe he might have moved to the right ; he might have been, perhaps, to the right of Mr. Plumer in the morning ; but what I mean is, that he never moved out of the place where the Counsel sat.
Pagina 89 - Rivett ; and that, at the time when this violence is imputed to him, Mr. Fergusson, who is reported to have begun the affray, and who had, it seems, a stick wrenched from him, was in his place at the Bar. I will then call to you Mr. Maxwell, a gentleman of rank and fortune in Scotland, who lately married a daughter of Mr. Bouverie, Member of Parliament for Northampton. He stood under the witness-box, which may be as in that corner, (pointing to a corner of the Court,) commanding a full and near view...
Pagina 92 - Where rumour of oppression and deceit, " Of unsuccessful or successful war, " Might never reach me more !" To conclude — If you think my Clients, or any of them, guilty, you are bound to convict them ; but, if there shall be ultimately before you such a case, upon evidence, as to justify the observations I have made upon the probabilities of the transaction, which probabilities are only the results of every man's experience in his passage through the world ; — if you should think that the appearances...
Pagina 7 - And the faid Attorney General of our faid Lord the King, for our faid Lord the King...
Pagina 1 - ... to the faid prifoner, to try upon their oath, whether the faid prifoner at the bar be the fame Thomas Rogers in the faid record of attainder named, and againft whom judgment was fo pronounced as aforefaid, or not...
Pagina 26 - A. Towards Mr. O'Connor. Q. That was not forward towards the body of the Court, but towards Mr. O'Connor ? A. It was towards the body of the Court, in order to get to Mr. O'Connor, and place himself under Mr. O'Connor, as I conceived. Rivett said he had got a warrant against Mr. O'Connor ; and the Jailor also said something upon the same subject, but I do not recollect the particular words ; and Mr. Justice...