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26 May 1804
I 411
Slavery repugnant to natural law
I 412
English law abhors slavery
I 413
Natural equity that hiring for an unspecified time should be for a year
I 417
Master bringing an action for damage done to his serv t must be assign his own loss
I 417
Qui facit per alium, facit per se
I 421
Spiritual Courts act pro salute animae
I 423
Marriage prohibited between certain persons by God's law
I 423
Disabilities to marriage grounded on natural law
I 428
Indissolubility of marriages built on divine revealed law
I 430
Husband and wife one person
I 431
Abjuration of realm = death
I 431
Husband & wife not to give evidence ag t each other because they are one person
I 435
Natural law for parents to provide for their children
I 436
Children disinherited without a sufficient ground assigned may move to have the will set aside on the ground of their parent's loss of reason.
I 438
Parents protect their children from a natural duty
I 441
Children owe duty to their parent from a principle of natural justice
I 451
All persons infants till 21
I 455
Corporations immortal
I 456
A corporation one person
I 457
King, bishops &c, a sole corporation
I 458
Parsons never die — every parson being the self same individual as his most remote predecessors
I 460
Common law a custom, arising from the agreem t of the whole community
I 462
Que facit per alium, facit per se
I 463
Corporation an invisible body
I 463
— its existence ideal — has no soul
I 469
King inspects all corporations in the Kings Bench
I 472
Dissolution of a corporation its civil death
II 3
Right to property founded on the reveal'd will
II 3
Law of nature confers property in first possessor
II 7
Originally men had a natural right to occupy any lands
II 7
Law of nature allows migration to deserts
II 8
By natural law & natural justice occupancy conveys right to possession
II 9
By universal law property remains in the taker
II 10
Universal law a secondary law of nature
II 13
By law of nature upon death of possessor his property should become common
II 16
Division of property into personal and real
II 18
Land = estates
II 18
By law of nature water common
II 20
Incorporeal hereditaments
II 22
Conveyance of patronage invisible and mental
II 31
A rank modus is felo de se
II 33
Distinction between common appendant & d o appartenant — a right to put animals that do & do not the ground
II 37
Public offices not to be sold the certain consequence being extortion on the purchaser
II 72
Corruption of blood
II 76
Functions dyslogistically epithetized
I 105
All... lands... are... holden... of the King
I 109
Corporation never dies
I 109 The King in judgm t of law never dies I 110 ...incorporeal hereditaments which savour of the realty. I 121
A grant of a manor to be constructed to be a tenure for life
I 125
An estate... after possibility of issue extinct... must be created by the act of God.
I 125
A possibility of issue is always supposed to exist ... tho' the donces be ... on hundred years old. I 150 King can never neglect any thing I 150 The law presumes no wrong in any man
I 174
A perpetuity... the law abhors
175
II 177
Wherever a greater estate and a less coincide & must in one & the same person... the less is immediately uninhabitated; or... is said to be merged; that is, sunk or drowned in the greater II 177 The King and the corporation can never die II 199
[Of an estate] one man may have the possession, another the right of possession & a third the right of property
II 199
Right of possession... & right of property... a double right
II 210
Natural reason that... possessions of parents should go... to their children
II 211 [After] the present possessor ... land by the law of nature would again become common. II 213 According to Bracton states shall never ascend because it is contrary to the laws of gravitation.
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