| James Kent - 1827 - 544 páginas
...Chancellor admitted it to be a question of the highest importance; and Lord Redesdale intimated, that it could not be just, that one party should be able,...the other party understood it to be governed. The case was remitted back for review, without any final decision in the English House of Lords; but the... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords - 1835 - 794 páginas
...were to prevail, any person had it in his power to alter the nature of his solemn engagements, &c. It could not be just, that one party should be able,...which the other party understood it to be governed (0)." — [Lord Lyndhurst: These opinions of those eminent Judges were not delivered as a judgment,... | |
| Samuel March Phillipps - 1838 - 586 páginas
...England between English subjects-; (3) on the ground, that it is not just that one party should be able to dissolve a contract by a law different from that...which the other party understood it to be governed. On a criminal charge, (as for murder committed in a foreign country, where it is indictable here,)... | |
| John William Smith - 1840 - 530 páginas
...their own law, as well as that of marriage It could not he just that one party should be able, at hit! option, to dissolve a contract by a law different...which the other party understood it to be governed." With regard to foreign judgments upon matters in their nature local, — such, for instance, as title... | |
| Leonard Shelford - 1841 - 532 páginas
...all other contracts by their own law, as well as that of marriage. ' It appears contrary to justice that one party should be able at his option to dissolve...formed, and by which the other party understood it to be governed.(m) *In Warrender v. Warrende.r(n) the principal question r #_„ -, was, whether the Scottish... | |
| John William Smith - 1842 - 612 páginas
...might, on the same principle, judge all other contracts by their own law, as well as that of marriage It could not be just that one party should be able,...which the other party understood it to be governed.'" With regard to foreign judgments upon matters in their nature local, — such, for instance, as title... | |
| James Kent - 1848 - 1046 páginas
...chancellor admitted it to be a question of the highest importance ; and Lord Redesdale intimated, that it could not be just, that one party should be able,...formed, and by which the other party understood it co be governed. The case was remitted back for review, without any final decision in the English House... | |
| 1848 - 638 páginas
...extensive application. ' It could not be just,' observed Lord Redesdale in the case already referred to, ' that one party should be able at his option to dissolve...which the other party understood it to be governed.' " Assuming, for the present, that this principle should be generally observed, it follows that the... | |
| Joel Prentiss Bishop - 1852 - 782 páginas
...the case of other contracts which are held obligatory according to the lex loci contractus. It is not just, that one party should be able at his option...which the other party understood it to be governed. If any other rule than the lex loci conlraclus is adopted, the law of marriage, on which the happiness... | |
| John William Smith - 1855 - 798 páginas
...might, on the same principle, judge all other contracts by their own law, as well as that of marriage It could not be just that one party should be able,...which the other party understood it to be governed." With regard to foreign judgments upon matters in their nature local, — snch, for instance, as title... | |
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