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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Results 1-5 of 47
Page 13
... taken part in and concurred in . I submit the report of the committee . Mr. Kean read the report of the committee . ( See Report at end of Minutes . ) The President : You have heard the report of the committee . It will be considered as ...
... taken part in and concurred in . I submit the report of the committee . Mr. Kean read the report of the committee . ( See Report at end of Minutes . ) The President : You have heard the report of the committee . It will be considered as ...
Page 14
... taken on it in sections . John Page , of Hanover : Mr. President , -I would like to ask if in drawing that report these gentlemen had before them the Code of New York ? Do your recommendations correspond in the main with the Code of New ...
... taken on it in sections . John Page , of Hanover : Mr. President , -I would like to ask if in drawing that report these gentlemen had before them the Code of New York ? Do your recommendations correspond in the main with the Code of New ...
Page 15
... taken great pains in preparing it , and while there may not be anything in the objections I make , yet , if it be proper , I would ask permission to read what I have prepared on these various bills . I may say that I believe that a ...
... taken great pains in preparing it , and while there may not be anything in the objections I make , yet , if it be proper , I would ask permission to read what I have prepared on these various bills . I may say that I believe that a ...
Page 31
... taken up in determining forms not right— that is , in determining questions of pleading . What is plead- ing , after all ? Nothing but stripping off the non - essentials to get at the merits of the matter - simply breaking the shell on ...
... taken up in determining forms not right— that is , in determining questions of pleading . What is plead- ing , after all ? Nothing but stripping off the non - essentials to get at the merits of the matter - simply breaking the shell on ...
Page 35
... taken on it as a whole . R. T. W. Duke , of Charlottesville : Mr. President , -I desire to make the motion that after two addresses , one in favor of the report and one against it , we then proceed to take up first Mr. Cochran's ...
... taken on it as a whole . R. T. W. Duke , of Charlottesville : Mr. President , -I desire to make the motion that after two addresses , one in favor of the report and one against it , we then proceed to take up first Mr. Cochran's ...
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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