Commonwealth shall respectively have power to admit a competent number of persons of an honest disposition, and learned in the law, to practice as attorneys in their respective courts. Woman's Work in America - Página 236editado por - 1891 - 457 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| James P. Cannon - 1908 - 454 páginas
...as also the Act of May 22, 1722, which finally became a law, and which provided "that there may be a competent number of persons of an honest disposition and learned in the law, admitted by the justices of the said respective courts, to practice as attorneys there." In the Act... | |
| William H. Loyd, William Henry Lloyd - 1910 - 310 páginas
...Constitutional Law in Two Centuries' Growth of American Law, 14; see also, II Connecticut Colonial Records, 59. number of persons of an honest disposition and learned in the law, admitted by the justices of the said respective courts, to practise as attorneys there." In the Act... | |
| Bertha Rembaugh - 1911 - 198 páginas
...Girls which was incorporated by women. — Laws, ch. 637, vol. 19. For Attorneys, — "There may be a competent number of persons, of an honest disposition and learned in the law, admitted by the judges of respective courts to practice as attorneys therein." — Laws, ch. 92, vol.... | |
| Charles Warren - 1911 - 608 páginas
...The first statute as to the admission of lawyers was enacted in 1722, providing that "there may be a competent number of persons of an honest disposition and learned in the law admitted by the Justices ... to practise as attorneys." A form of oath was prescribed in 1726. The... | |
| 1919 - 768 páginas
...Kind returned by the Sheriff. "And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That there may be a competent Number of persons of an honest Disposition, and learned in the Law, admitted by the Justices of the said respective Courts, to practice as attorneys there; who shall behave... | |
| Harry Martin John Klein - 1924 - 698 páginas
...province of Pennsylvania, and by an Act of May 22, of that year, it was provided that "There may be a competent number of persons of an honest disposition, and learned in the law, admitted by the justices of the said respective courts, to practice as attorneys there, who shall behave... | |
| Alfred Zantzinger Reed, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching - 1927 - 568 páginas
...however, of relatively little importance. Pennsylvania and Delaware merely authorize the admission of " a competent number of persons, of an honest disposition, and learned in the law," leaving the courts entirely free both to interpret, and to supplement, this vague formula. Illinois... | |
| Pennsylvania Bar Association - 1928 - 616 páginas
...Act of 1834, PL 333, 354, the courts of record in Pennsylvania are authorized to admit as attorneys "a competent number of persons of an honest disposition" and "learned in the law." In passing on the questions of legal learning and honesty of disposition, obviously the latter presents... | |
| Gail Stuart Rowe - 1994 - 382 páginas
...attornies," they could be suspended or prohibited from further pleading. A decade later the law called for "a competent Number of persons of an honest Disposition and learned in the Law" to be admitted to the colony's courts. Lawyers had merely to file a Warrant of Attorney in the prothonotary's... | |
| Charles Penrose Keith - 1997 - 650 páginas
...as it remained in force : and it was not until 1722 that the Assembly ordained that " there may be a competent number of persons of an honest disposition and learned in the law admitted by the justices of the said respective courts to practise as attornies there." About the time... | |
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