Report of the First[-thirty-first] Annual Meeting of the Virginia State Bar Association, Volume 6Virginia State Bar Association, 1893 - Bar associations |
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Page 16
... meaning ? Do not these amendments proceed upon the misconception that our system of pleading permits the parties " to conceal as much as possible what was going to be proved at the trial , " as stated in the address of our last ...
... meaning ? Do not these amendments proceed upon the misconception that our system of pleading permits the parties " to conceal as much as possible what was going to be proved at the trial , " as stated in the address of our last ...
Page 19
... meaning of its allegations to ascertain whether it states good cause of action . " The pleader ought surely to be ready to show that , in substance and effect , he has stated a good cause of action , or a good defence ; and in practice ...
... meaning of its allegations to ascertain whether it states good cause of action . " The pleader ought surely to be ready to show that , in substance and effect , he has stated a good cause of action , or a good defence ; and in practice ...
Page 32
... meaning of the amendments providing that a Court shall administer law and equity in every case before it . I had stated that , under our statute section 2239 , every imaginable equitable defence could be made in any action on any ...
... meaning of the amendments providing that a Court shall administer law and equity in every case before it . I had stated that , under our statute section 2239 , every imaginable equitable defence could be made in any action on any ...
Page 156
... meaning , at least in England and America , and times , circumstances and conditions have altered , from period to period , the acts and offences which may properly be classed under such a head . A distinguished author , for lack of a ...
... meaning , at least in England and America , and times , circumstances and conditions have altered , from period to period , the acts and offences which may properly be classed under such a head . A distinguished author , for lack of a ...
Page 186
... meaning of the words as used by the writer— this being the equivalent of the legal intention , i . e . , the inten- tion which the law recognizes as operative and dispositive . But it must not be supposed that the actual use of words by ...
... meaning of the words as used by the writer— this being the equivalent of the legal intention , i . e . , the inten- tion which the law recognizes as operative and dispositive . But it must not be supposed that the actual use of words by ...
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admissible adopted affidavit amend and re-enact annual meeting application appointed asso assumpsit attorney Bar Association Big Stone Gap bill by-laws chancery Charlottesville Circuit civil clause client Code of Virginia common law Constitution corporation counsel crime declarations of intention defendant demurrer detinue docket duty elected England equivocation Executive Committee extrinsic evidence facts filed form of action Front Royal Harrisonburg Hiscocks interpretation JAMES JOHN Judge judgment judicial jury justice latent ambiguities Law Reform lawyer Legislature Lexington Lynchburg matter meaning ment mittee motion Norfolk object party Patteson person Pettit plaintiff plea pleading practice present President President,-I principles procedure profession proposed punishment question R. S. Thomas reason resolution Richmond Roanoke rule Special Committee statute Staunton testator testator's thereof tion trial Tucker Virginia State Bar Warrenton WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS Wigram William words writing Wytheville