The Government of England: Its Structure and Its DevelopmentLongmans, Green, 1887 - 636 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 68
Página 10
... assembly , the greatest of the councils that surround the throne , and including both the hereditary councillors of the King and the representatives that reflect the varying desires and interests of the nation at large , has among other ...
... assembly , the greatest of the councils that surround the throne , and including both the hereditary councillors of the King and the representatives that reflect the varying desires and interests of the nation at large , has among other ...
Página 42
... assembly by whose authority it was enacted . But at a time when the meetings of Parliament were rare and brief , and when perhaps there was but little of the knowledge or the skill that legislation requires , if a statute worked ill ...
... assembly by whose authority it was enacted . But at a time when the meetings of Parliament were rare and brief , and when perhaps there was but little of the knowledge or the skill that legislation requires , if a statute worked ill ...
Página 127
... Assembly is , as a general rule , unconstitutional . " In all these cases there are the two elements , the legality of the one course , and the expedience and usage of the other . Perhaps it may be said that wherever experience and the ...
... Assembly is , as a general rule , unconstitutional . " In all these cases there are the two elements , the legality of the one course , and the expedience and usage of the other . Perhaps it may be said that wherever experience and the ...
Página 135
... assemblies ; not , I think , for the purpose of distinguishing , as Mr. Todd suggests , between the colonial and the Imperial legislative bodies , but because the supervision of the Executive is granted , not by statute , but by ...
... assemblies ; not , I think , for the purpose of distinguishing , as Mr. Todd suggests , between the colonial and the Imperial legislative bodies , but because the supervision of the Executive is granted , not by statute , but by ...
Página 150
... assemblies in similar circumstances * it has claimed and sometimes exercised the power of nominating by its express vote the principal officers of the Crown . In the Great Charter of John provision is made for the election by the Barons ...
... assemblies in similar circumstances * it has claimed and sometimes exercised the power of nominating by its express vote the principal officers of the Crown . In the Great Charter of John provision is made for the election by the Barons ...
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Government of England: Its Structure and Its Development William Edward Hearn Vista completa - 1886 |
The Government of England: Its Structure, and Its Development William Edward Hearn Vista completa - 1867 |
The Government of England: Its Structure and Its Development William Edward Hearn Vista completa - 1887 |
Términos y frases comunes
accordingly Act of Parliament administration advice advisers assembly assent authority Barons bill body Cabinet Chancellor CHIG circumstances colony command Common Law conduct consent Const Constitution court Crown declared discretion dispute dissolution duty Earl Edward England Exchequer executive Executive Government exercise express favour G. C. Lewis George the Third Government grant Hallam Henry Hist House of Commons House of Lords impeachment judges judicial jurisdiction justice King King's lands legislation legislature Lord Coke Lord Macaulay Majesty matters measure ment ministers ministry occasion opinion Parl Parlia Parliamentary party passed Peerage Peers petition Pitt political practice prerogative present principle Privy Council proceedings proclamations Queen question reason Reform refused reign remedy rendered resolution respecting revenue Royal seal seems servants Sir Robert Peel Sovereign statute tallage tenants tenure tion UNIV vote Walter Mildmay Whig writ
Pasajes populares
Página 501 - Parliament is not a congress of ambassadors from different and hostile interests ; which interests each must maintain, as an agent and advocate, against other agents and advocates ; but parliament is a deliberative assembly of one nation, with one interest, that of the whole ; where, not local purposes, not local prejudices ought to guide, but the general good, resulting from the general reason of the whole.
Página 138 - ... it is accorded, that if any other case supposed treason which is not above specified, doth happen before any justices, the justices shall tarry without any going to judgment of the treason, till the cause be shewed and declared before the King and his parliament, whether it ought to be judged treason or other felony.
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