1823. Oct r.. 8. + +++

Constitutional Code 2. Enactive Part

Ch XI Judiciary collectively §. 20. Judges Attendance on ordinary duty

q Used for Ch XII. §. 25.

§.20. Judges Attendance on ordinary duty. Yes: word for word R.D.

# Transfer in Judges?

1 Art.1. When ships , so may Justices too In an Immediate Judicatory never empty the judgment seat. no day, no hour

Art. 1. When ships , so may Justice too. do

In an Immediate Judicatory the judgment seat is never empty:

on no day of the year. on no hour of the day

2 Art. 2. Judicial service is ordinary or extraordinary: extraordinary night or out service. Ordinary is on the judgment seat in the day time

Art. 2. [Attendance a] judicial duty service is on

ordinary or on extraordinary duty service: extraordinary is either

night duty service or out-duty service. Ordinary duty is service is duty that which is

, in the day time. performed on the judgment seat in the day time in the time not

commonly in sleep

3 Art. 3. Days of service for Judge in person all days but the 52 of rest with [26] others at his choice

Art. 3. By the Registrar more Attendance Registers

Art. 3. Days of attendance, for the Judge ,

in person all the days in the year: with the exception of the 52

days equal in number of of to the days of general rest: and [26] other days at his choice

4 Art. 4. Hours, on an average [8]

Art. 4. Hours, in each attendance day, [8]

on an average.

5 Art. 5. Sitting, to avoid breaking the thread of evidence, over-time one day, he may deduct so much time from any of the next [6] days.

Art. 5. When, to avoid breaking the thread of evidence

he sits over time on one day, he may sit so much

the less, on any day or days of the next [6] days.

6 Art. 6. But on no day or hour he quits his seat until some Depute permanent or occasional be present: not before successor appears does occupant quit it

Art. 6. But, on no day or hour, ought he to be

absent from duty, service unless some Depute, permanent or occasional,

be present: when a successor appears and takes the seat,

then and not before, he who occupies it quits it.