Transactions, Volume 6Hanzsche, 1901 |
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Page 14
... legislation was directed against them and some of their methods , yet in spite of it all , they have attained proportions which indicate with unerring certainty that they fill a real need of the business world and have come to stay . If ...
... legislation was directed against them and some of their methods , yet in spite of it all , they have attained proportions which indicate with unerring certainty that they fill a real need of the business world and have come to stay . If ...
Page 16
... legislative sessions during these years , enacting four hundred and six charters and supplements , an average of nine and a fraction for each session . During the earlier years there was frequently but one Act during a session ...
... legislative sessions during these years , enacting four hundred and six charters and supplements , an average of nine and a fraction for each session . During the earlier years there was frequently but one Act during a session ...
Page 17
... legislative sessions and the work of granting charters appears to have grown very considerably , for we find eleven hundred and sixteen of them , including supplements , or an average of forty - eight and a fraction for each session ...
... legislative sessions and the work of granting charters appears to have grown very considerably , for we find eleven hundred and sixteen of them , including supplements , or an average of forty - eight and a fraction for each session ...
Page 18
... legislative mind , that it became a part of the organic law under the new Constitution , as exhibited by the following section : " Corporations may be formed under general laws , but shall not be created by Special Acts except for munic ...
... legislative mind , that it became a part of the organic law under the new Constitution , as exhibited by the following section : " Corporations may be formed under general laws , but shall not be created by Special Acts except for munic ...
Page 20
... legislative history , so much so , that the effort which began in 1838 to relieve the Assembly from the necessity of spending its time with such work , has been steadily continued , and although , as we have seen , many charters are ...
... legislative history , so much so , that the effort which began in 1838 to relieve the Assembly from the necessity of spending its time with such work , has been steadily continued , and although , as we have seen , many charters are ...
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1897 Cumberland 400 Equitable Building adjourn Administration and Legal admission adopted amendment Annapolis Assembly Asso attorney Baltimore City Balto Bar Association Bel Air Bernard bill candidate carried unanimously cause Chair Charles E Charles st charters Chestertown client Commission Committee on Judicial Constitution corporation County Court of Appeals Cumberland duty Easton election Elkton enacted Equitable Building evil examination Executive Council favor Fidelity Building Frank Garrett County gentlemen George George Weems Hagerstown Henry Herald Building James John John Thomson Mason Judicial Administration justice Law Building lawyers Legal Ethics Legal Reform legislation Legislature Lehmayer Lexington st Maryland Maryland State Bar matter meeting mittee Oakland Owens paper party passed Paul st practice President Princess Anne profession question referred resolution Robert Sams Secretary session statute suggestion Talbott Thomas tion Towson Turner Upper Marlboro vote voters Westminster Whitelock William H Wirt
Popular passages
Page 57 - ... regarding proposed legislation and in advocacy of claims before departments of government, upon the same principles of ethics which justify his appearance before the Courts; but it is unprofessional for a lawyer so engaged to conceal his attorneyship, or to employ secret personal solicitations, or to use means other than those addressed to the reason and understanding to influence action.
Page 53 - IN SUPPORTING A CLIENT'S CAUSE. Nothing operates more certainly to create or to foster popular prejudice against lawyers as a class, and to deprive the profession of that full measure of public esteem and confidence which belongs to the proper discharge of its duties than does the false claim, often set up by the unscrupulous in defense of questionable transactions, that it is the duty of the lawyer to do whatever may enable him to succeed in winning his client's cause.
Page 27 - The President: You have heard the report of the Committee. What is the pleasure of the Association in reference to it.
Page 50 - I will abstain from all offensive personality, and advance no fact prejudicial to the honor or reputation of a party or witness, unless required by the justice of the cause with which...
Page 18 - Corporations may be formed under general laws ; but shall not be created by special act, except for municipal purposes, and in cases where, in the judgment of the Legislature, the objects of the corporation cannot be attained under general laws.
Page 53 - An attorney should strive, at all times, to uphold the honor, maintain the dignity and promote the usefulness of the profession ; for it is so interwoven with the administration of justice, that whatever redounds to the good of one, advances the other; and the attorney thus discharges, not merely an obligation to his brothers, but a high duty to the State and his fellowman. 9. An attorney should not speak slightingly or disparagingly of his profession, or pander in...
Page 164 - I hereby certify that Edward J. Peters, esquire, before whom the annexed affidavits were made, and who has thereto subscribed his name, was, at the time of so doing, a justice of the peace of the State of Maryland, in and for the city of Baltimore, duly commissioned and sworn. In testimony...
Page 140 - You'd scarce expect one of my age, To speak in public on the stage ; And if I chance to fall below Demosthenes or Cicero, Don't view me with a critic's eye, But pass my imperfections by. Large streams from little fountains flow; Tall oaks from little acorns grow...
Page 55 - Indirect advertisement for business, by furnishing or inspiring editorials or press notices, regarding causes in which the attorney takes part, the manner in which they were conducted, the importance of his positions, the magnitude of the interests involved, and all other like self-laudation, is of evil tendency and wholly unprofessional.
Page 58 - ... incidental matters pending the trial, not affecting the merits of the cause, or working substantial prejudice to the rights of the client, such as forcing the opposite...