| James Madison Porter - 1837 - 72 páginas
...never been asserted or recognized, and is supported by no authority. Can it derive aid from reason? "The objects for which a corporation is created are...in most cases the sole consideration, of the grant. In most eleemosynary institutions, the object would be difficult, perhaps unattainable, without the... | |
| Indiana. General Assembly. Senate - 1837 - 868 páginas
..."are such as are supposed best calculated to effect the object for which it was created." And again: "the objects for which a corporation is created are universally such as the goverment wishes to promote." It is also sustained in Blackstone's commentaries, (467) by Angell and... | |
| Pennsylvania. Constitutional Convention - 1838 - 696 páginas
...never been asserted or recognized, and is supported by no authority. Can it derive aid from reason ? "The objects for which a corporation is created are...in most cases the sole consideration, of the grant. In most eleemosynary institutions, the object would be difficult, perhaps unattainable, without the... | |
| John Marshall - 1839 - 762 páginas
...never been asserted or recognized, and is supported by no authority. Can it derive aid from reason ? The objects for which a corporation is created are...most cases, the sole consideration, of the grant. In most eleemosynary institutions the object would be difficult, perhaps unattainable, without the... | |
| James R. Hope - 1840 - 76 páginas
...supported by no authority. Can it derive 29 " aid from reason ? The objects for which a " poration is created are universally such as the " Government...deemed " beneficial to the country, and this benefit consti" tutes the consideration, and, in most instances, the " sole consideration of the grant. In... | |
| Samuel Hazard - 1841 - 440 páginas
...682 to 693. Because it is an executed contract, arid therefore irrevocable ; and because the object* for which a corporation is created are universally such as the government wishes to promote; being deemed beneficial to the country ; and this benefit constitutes the consideration, and in most... | |
| Florida. Supreme Court - 1848 - 786 páginas
...J. Marshall, in Dartmouth College r. Woodward, 4 Con. R., 544. Those objects "are such universally as the government wishes to promote. They are deemed...country, and this benefit constitutes the consideration for the grant." Ibid. Distinctive character of this bank, as compared with ordinary banks of discount... | |
| George Ticknor Curtis - 1854 - 674 páginas
...never been asserted or recognised, and is supported by no authority. Can it derive aid from reason ? " The objects for which a corporation is created are...in most cases, the sole consideration of the grant. In most eleemosynary institutions, the object would be difficult, perhaps unattainable, without the... | |
| Nathan Howard (Jr.) - 1866 - 618 páginas
...a corporation is ereated are universally such as the government wishes to promote. They are dcemed beneficial to the country, and this benefit constitutes the consideration, and in most cases Chenango Bridge Company agt. The Binghamton Bridge Company. the sole consideration for the grant."... | |
| Pennsylvania. Courts, John Wayne Ashmead - 1871 - 572 páginas
...for which a corporation is created are unniversally such as the government wishes to promote ; being deemed beneficial to the country ; and this benefit constitutes the consideration, and in most instances the sole consideration, of the grant. 4 Wheaton, 637. In the instance, however, before us,... | |
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