1826. May 20.

Constitutional Code

Ch. IX. Ministers Collectively.

S.6. Statistic Function.

or 7

Art... or 7. II Subject matter or source of loss, a thing moveable

modes of loss. Examples 1. Non application 2. Application

uneconomical 3. Deterioration or destruction spontaneous for want

of appropriate custody. 4. Deterioration by positive human

agency. 5. Deterioration for want of reparation. 5.

Miscalculation: strange in a place not conveniently accessible:

whence less of labour employed in excess. In case of articles not

applicable but by consumption, as food, fuel &.c 6.

Consumption useless 7. Consumption excessive 8. Consumption

uneconomical. 9. Lease gratuitous. 10. Lease, at under price. 11.

Lease to a borrower by whom it is deteriorated. 12. Lease to a

non-solvent borrower. 13. Lease to a borrower by whom it is not

returned. 14. Elimination by accident, without blame to the

custodial functionary.

or 7 contin d.

15. Elimination through negligence or rashness on the part of the

custodial functionary. 16. Embezzlement by the custodial

functionary. 17. Theft, by another person, functionary or non

functionary. 18 Fraudulent obtainment by d o. 19. Peculation: from less in any one of the above or

other forms, or profit derived by a direction or custodient

functionary.

or 8.

Art... or 8. Efficient causes and modes of spontaneous

deterioration. Examples: 1.Evaporation 2. Exsiccation 3.

4. Induration. 5. Emacliction 6. Fermentation,

saccharineacetous, or putrefaction. 7. Discoloration.

or 9.

Art... or 9. Efficient causes or modes of spontaneous destruction.

Examples 1. Subject matters vegetable in a natural state in large

masses. Efficient cause, contribution in consequence of

fermentation. 2. Subject matter vegetable in a manufactured state

sails on cordage heaped together in a humid state, with an

contiguity to matter efficient cause, combustion as

above.

or 9 contin d.

3. Subject matter mineral with vegetable in a manufactured state,

gunpowder. Efficient cause of destruction, by explosion, in wind

as glass a bubble having the effect of a lens.

or 10.

Art... or 10. Subject matters, considered in respect of their degrees

of natural durability, independently of their application to

use. Examples Articles of greatest durability. 1. Precious

stones crystalized. 2. Stones ( of Earths) in general. 3.

Metals in general. 4. Shells of shell fish, my naturalist ranked

under the name of 5. Bones and horns

of animals. 6. Alcohol... bodies, and other products of

chemical analysis if kept from evaporation and communication with

the atmosphere. II. Articles of least natural durability: tho'

for a greater or lesser length of time preservable by the art. 1.

Flesh of animals 2. Herbaceous parts of vegetables. III Articles

of intermediate degrees of natural durability. Examples. 1. Wood

of ligneous plants 2. Seeds of plants as wheat & other grain.

3. Roots, tuberous and bulbous. Art.11
Similar Items
  • Title: [1826. April 3 d. Ch.IX. Ministers]
    Description: 1826. April 3 d.

    Ch.IX. Ministers Collectively.

    S.3. Functions in all.

    19.

    Applicative-common object of procurative and custoditive

    operation, employing using, applying to use.

    20.

    Accidents, to which during custody and application, the thing will

    remain exposed. 1. Destruction. 2. Deterioration — practical

    destruction of value.

    21.

    Corresponding functions: Conservative: which is 1.

    Antedestructive. 2. Antedeteriorative.

    22.

    Incapacitation of the thing for use — maybe 1. Total. 2.

    Partial.

    23.

    Total incapacitation of the thing for use, may be 1. By

    elimination 2. Without elimination

    24.

    Elimination implies design: If design with a view to use, to

    clearing the establishment of an incumbrance, or to its being of

    use elsewhere — correspondent function the eliminative if

    not with either view, function none, but a made of delinquency:

    to wit, wrongful... ... or peculation.

    25.

    In capacities for the use without removal by design, is either

    natural or factitious. 1. If natural, departure total or

    partial 2. If factitious, either 1. Destructive; or 2.

    Deteriorative

    26.

    Operation, reparation: function, reparative.

    27.

    Sale function exercisable in case of total deterioration or

    destruction, the eliminative.

    28.

    Operations 1. Functions, as to the exercise of which, option will

    be to be made in case of partial destruction, or say

    deterioration.

    1. Reparation 2. Rendition 3. Out-letting 4. Transformation,

    where the nature of the subject -matter admitts

    transformative is analogous to reparation: it is more or less

    extensive reintegration in value.

    29.

    Application to use, — its made and correspondent function 1.

    Without elimination, destruction or deterioration, examples —

    1. Irremovable 1. Any land 2. Land covered with water.

    29 contin d.

    3. Moveables 1. 2. ...because unselfoxydating

    metals, gold and silver not destructible but by friction.

    30.

    2. By slow destruction or say, consumption. Examples. 1.

    Furniture 2. Cloathing 3. Machinery 4. Implements of

    manufacture.

    31.

    3. By quick or say rapid consumption. Examples. 1. Materials of

    food. 2. Of drinks. 3. Of fuel for heat. Of Fuel for light.

    5. Of fuel for explosion.

    32.

    Sole case in which

    compleat destruction in value follows from

    transformative destruction. 1. Consumption of

    fuel for... 1. Light. 2.Explosion.

    33.

    By consumption is produced a valuable

    succedaneum-valuable when in large

    quantities: in the case of, 1. Food. 2. Drink, —a

    valuable residuum in the case of 1. Fuel for heat alone.
  • Title: [Polit. Economy 27 Aug 1801 [Col 1]
    Description: Polit. Economy 27 Aug 1801

    [Col 1]

    I. Sponte Acta

    First steps in an Analysis in the form of an Encyclopedical Tree shewing how to draw a circle round the subject and how to invent or discover what remains to be invented or discovered in this field of knowledged.

    [Col. 2]

    26.

    Agents.

    Beings considered as sources of motion are termed Agents.

    27.

    Agents considered in respect of the degree in which the effect is dependent on those who are

    1. Principal

    2. Subordinate

    28.

    Among agents all that are not animals, and among animals all that are not human are of course subordinate.

    29.

    Among human agents, every individual is subordinate with reference to those of whom is composed the government under which he lives.

    30.

    1. Discovery Corporal

    1. Objects of Discovery—in respect to modes[?] put 1. /Things themselves/[...?] things/ in the forms in which they exist previous to the disscovery.

    /1./I/ Portion of Land.

    31.

    /2./II./ All bodies in an unimproved state. viz:

    1. Mineral

    2. Vegetable

    3. Animal

    32.

    III. Articles in an improved or even factitious state, in the event of their having been lost i.e. so circumstanced that either their existence or their situation is unknown.

    33.

    IV. Celestial Bodies. See Extraction 41.

    34.

    II. Ideal

    II. Modes of giving birth to things of a new form or species.

    [Col. 5]

    35.

    2. Extraction Modes

    By extraction separation of a thing from the body which is its natural source viz. Land dry or covered with water.

    36.

    Examples of it are—as applied to

    I. Minerals

    1. Digging out

    2. Pounding

    3. Smelting

    4. Carrying away

    37.

    II. Vegtables

    1. Felling (Timber)

    2. Cutting ([...?])

    3. Gathering Fruits

    4. Digging up Roots

    38.

    III. Animals

    Beasts Birds

    1. Cathing by the chase

    2. by shooting

    3. by deceipt as by traps bait &c.

    4. Catching fish in any of the above or other ways.

    [Col. 6]

    39.

    2. Extraction

    3. Importation

    A portion of matter condisered as a raw material is either of home growth or foreign growth.

    40.

    In case of home growth an operation necessary to be performed in all cases, and the first that is necessary in all cases is Extraction.

    41.

    In this case an operation by which that of Extraction is preceded in some cases, not preceded in others is Discovery. See 30.

    42.

    If of foreign growth, then the first operation that comes to be performed upon it on home ground, is Importation: which is to home articles what extraction is to foreign articles.

    [Col. 7]

    43.

    4. Naturalization.

    5. Improvement

    Preservation.

    4. Naturalization supposes previous importation either of the individual article itself or of the parent stock.

    44.

    It is a sort of negative improvement: the absence of deperition or deterioration.

    45.

    5. Improvement is a title applicable to home-produced and imported articles.

    46.

    6. Preservation is a sort of negative improvement: it is the absence of deperition and deterioration.

    Sources of The distrinction belonging to this head—

    1. Qualities in respect of which the deterioration may take place

    2. Efficient Causes of the deterioration or deperition.

    [Col. 8]

    47.

    Conveyance

    {Physical

    {Legal

    7. Conveyance.

    local

    The labour employd in conveyance is a charge bearing in a greater or less degree on almost every article home-produced or imported—improved or unimproved—on every article/except/except the fruit a man plucks and cuts as he sits under ‘his own vine or his own fig tree’

    48.

    8. Conveyance legal of the rights of property concerning the article form one proprietor to another.

    49.

    This species of conveuyance is a natural /tho/and/ usual accompaniment of the other, but not a necessary one. Rum may go from a mans plantation in Jamaica to his house in London without change of proprietorship. A table may be sold or given by the [...?] inhabitant of one room in a house to the inhabitant of the next, with very little change of place.

    [Col. 9]

    50.

    9. Exportation

    9. Exportation. By exportation of /any article/any part of the matter of wealth from the home country to a foreign country the mass of wealth in the home country can not in a direct way receive any encrease.

    51.

    But, /unless/except/ in the case where a thing is exported gratis from the home country to the foreign country (as in the case of a /present/gift/, a tribute or a pledge) exportation from the home country is /a/an/ event necessarily connected either as a condition precedent or a condition subsequent with importation into it.

    [Col. 10]

    52.

    10. Employment.

    10. Employment.

    An article of rude produce may be employd by being employd either in the way of immediate use, or in the way subservient or remote use.

    53.

    Employed in either way it will be employd in the way either of prompt consumption or consumption more or less slow and gradual, according to its nature.

    54.

    Of employment in the way of subservient use whatsoever is not included in Extraction, may be referred to fabrication.

    55.

    A branch of fabrication is manufacturing, but the word manufacturing is seldom applied but[?] on the supposition that to those articles when fabricated is destined to become the subject matter of exchange in a commercial way—in the way of trade.
  • Title: [1823 Oct. 25 Constitutional Code]
    Description: 1823 Oct. 25

    Constitutional Code or Procedure

    Ch Appellate Judges S. Grounds for Quasi Appeal

    Ch. Appellate Judges S. Grounds for Quasi Appeal

    27 1.

    Art 1. Competent grounds for Quasi Appeal Examples. 1. Transcription of appropriate part of records, not allowed. 2. In record, material omission. 3. In Record, untrue assertion. 4. In Record, untrue substitution. 5. In record, matter irrelevant or immaterial, whereby to labour or expence of transcription, vexations addition made. 6. Delay or say non-dispatch, all comprehensive. 7. Do as to some particular operation needful on either side.

    28. 2. Art 2. Where by delay, a period during which a measure needful, and alone or with a thus sufficient forgiving execution to a law, has been to expence, such delay has misdecision, or the equivalent non-decision for it's effect. Say through delay misdecision or it's equivalent necessitated: or right decision im -possibilitated. Note

    Ch. Appellate Judges S. Ground for Quasi-appeals

    28 2. contin d. Note, that in so far as the Pursuer is in the right, non decision so long as it lasts, has the same effect as misdecision

    29 3. Art 3. Reducible to forthcomingness is every such means: viz of persons on things: for justiciability on evidence.

    30. 4. Art 4. Delay is temporary inaction or non operation, absolute or relative, all comprehensive or particular Where the delay has for it's effect misdecision or what is equivalent, had it's appropriate -means of forthcomingness been employed, the forthcomingness requisite, and in consquence of it right decision, w. d have had place. but by the delay, such forthcomingness hav g been rendered unobtainable, misdecision or the equivalent has been the consequence.

    31. 5. Art 5. Forthcomingness of things-thence right decision hors prevented by undue delay: its causes. Examples 1. Expatriation. 2 3. deterioration- 4. Relative deterioration

    Ch. Appellate Judges S. Grounds for Quasi appeal

    32. 6. Art 6. D o of persons. 1. Expatriation 2. 3. Insolvency 4. Death 5. Relative deperition or deterioration of faculties

    33. 7. Art 7. The thing or person a source of evidence, causation of nonforthcomingness may have had for its effect suppression of evidence