| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords, Sir Sydney Smith Bell - 1843 - 868 páginas
...to do a ministerial act, and the summons shews that the defenders have committed a wrong, which has worked damage to the pursuers. I must likewise observe,...that every one must be taken to intend the necessary consequence of his deliberate acts. Then we are told " that the action cannot be maintained " because... | |
| Herbert Broom - 1852 - 616 páginas
...Arch. Cr. PL, 8th ed. 11. 5 Dyer, 104, b. 6 Argument, Mitchell v. Jenkins, 5 B. & Ad. 590; ECLR 27. "Malice, in the legal acceptation of the word, is...conscious violation of the law to the prejudice of another ;" per Lord Campbell, 9 Cl. & Fin. 321. See also, per Pollock, CB, Slim-win v. Swindall, 12 M. & W.... | |
| Edward William Cox - 1861 - 582 páginas
...(Holt., 215); Burrows v. Wright (1 East, 617); Roscoc NP, 2 ed., 773. Malice, in the legal acceptance of the word, is not confined to personal spite against...violation of the law to the prejudice of another, Ferguson v. Earl of Kinnoule (9 CF, 321), and therefore the words " maliciously made away with," do... | |
| Edward William Cox - 1861 - 586 páginas
...Burrows v. Wright (1 East, 617); Roscoe NP, 2 ed., 773. Malice, in the legal acceptance of the word, ia not confined to personal spite against individuals,...violation of the law to the prejudice of another, Ferguson v. Earl of Kinnoule (9 CF, 321), and therefore the words " maliciously made away with," do... | |
| R.C. Lepage - 1866 - 518 páginas
...fatally bent upon mischief." " Malice/' said Lord Campbell, " in the legal acceptation of the " term is not confined to personal spite against individuals,...violation of the law to the prejudice of " another." Lord Tenterden said, " I take it to be a general rule " that an act unlawful in itself and injurious... | |
| Punjab (India) - 1869 - 838 páginas
...Lords, "in the legal acceptation of the term, is not confined to personal spite against individuals, bat consists in a conscious violation of the law to the prejudice of another." " I take it to be a general rule," said Lord Tenterden in Duncan v. Thwaitrjs, " that an act unlawful... | |
| Alexander Mansfield Burrill - 1870 - 674 páginas
...Cfiitt. Gen. Pr. 46. Otherwise called malice in law. Pollock, CB 12 Mees. & W. 787. 2 Greenl. Ev. § 453. Malice, in the legal acceptation of the word, is not...violation of the law, to the prejudice of another. Lord Campbell, 9 Cl. & Fin. 321. Malice, in its legal sense, means 'a wrongful act done intentionally,... | |
| John Shortt - 1871 - 824 páginas
...malicathe legal import of the word malice must be borne in mind. " Malice," says Lord Campbell, (h) " in the legal acceptation of the word, is not confined...violation of the law to the prejudice of another." "Malice," says Bayley, J.,(i) " in common acceptation, means ill-will against a person ; but in its... | |
| Appleton Morgan - 1875 - 538 páginas
...legal acceptation of the word, is not confined to personal spite 1 Le Farm v. Malcomson, 1 HL Cas. 664. against individuals, but consists in a conscious violation of the law to the prejudice of another." " Malice," says another learned Judge,1 " in common acceptation, means ill-will against a person ;... | |
| Herbert Broom, Edward Alfred Hadley - 1875 - 858 páginas
...a wrongful act intentionally, without just cause or excuse" (e), or more generally, as "consisting in a conscious violation of the law to the prejudice of another" (/). Malice * accompanying a direct injury may aggravate and "• ' J intensify it; ex, gr., may raise... | |
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