| Daniel Chipman - History - 1849 - 234 pages
...power to rule by extemporary and arbitrary decrees, but is bound to dispense law and justice, and to decide the rights of the subject by promulgated, standing laws, and known authorized judges. And that men give up their natural independence to society, with this trust, that they shall be governed... | |
| Henry Richard Fox Bourne - Celebrities - 1876 - 616 pages
...subjects." Again, " the legislative or supreme authority cannot assume to itself a power to rule by extemporary arbitrary decrees, but is bound to dispense...the subject by promulgated standing laws and known authorised judges." " The supreme power," moreover, " cannot take from any man any part of his property... | |
| John Locke - Liberty - 1884 - 332 pages
...is bound to dispense justice and I decide the rights of the subject by promulgated standing laws,t and known authorized judges. For the law of Nature...unwritten, and so nowhere^ to be found but in the * " Two foundations there are whicu uear up public societies ; the one a natural inclination whereby... | |
| Gustav Marchet - Administrative law - 1885 - 462 pages
...toic£)ttgften (Staatejtoeáe ift bie @iá)erb,eit imb baritm »it is bound, to dispense justice and to decide the rights of the subject, by promulgated, standing laws, and known authorized judges«. 9iaa)bem bie gefe|gebenbe ®eft>aít nur eine bom $otfe auf eine Gcinjeiberfon ober eine Korporation... | |
| Abbott Lawrence Lowell - Political science - 1889 - 246 pages
...itself a power to rule by extemporary, arbitrary decrees ; but is bound to dispense justice, and to decide the rights of the subject, by promulgated, standing laws, and known authorized judges ; " because it was precisely a desire to avoid the inconveniences of having no fixed laws and no certain... | |
| Sir George Cornewall Lewis - Colonies - 1891 - 468 pages
...itself a power to rule by extemporary, arbitrary decrees ; but is bound to dispense justice, and to decide the rights of the subject, by promulgated, standing laws, and known, authorised judges.' Essay on Civil Government, Part II. § 136. ' Whatever form the commonwealth is... | |
| Robert Warden Lee - Political science - 1898 - 140 pages
...people." S 3.135. 2. " The legislative, or supreme authority, cannot assume to itself a power to rule by extemporary arbitrary decrees, but is bound to dispense...promulgated standing laws, and known authorized judges." Otherwise it betrays its "trust1," the end for which it was ordained. s I36 3. The legislative "cannot... | |
| Herbert Friedenwald - United States - 1904 - 330 pages
...another." " Secondly, the legislative or supreme authority cannot assume to itself a power to rule by extemporary, arbitrary decrees, but is bound to dispense...promulgated standing laws, and known authorized judges." For " absolute arbitrary power, or governing without settled standing laws, can neither of them consist... | |
| John Locke - Liberty - 1905 - 198 pages
...it 136. Secondly, The legislative, or supreme authority, cannot assume to"itself a power to rule by extemporary arbitrary decrees, but is bound to dispense...the subject by promulgated standing laws, and known authorised judges. For the law of nature being unwritten, and so nowhere to be found but in the minds... | |
| Charles Sumner Lobingier - Legislation - 1909 - 466 pages
...itself a power to rule by extemporary, arbitrary decrees ; but is bound to dispense justice, and to decide the rights of the subject, by promulgated, standing laws, and known authorized judges." Therefore laws which "take away and destroy the property of the people " have no binding force. However,... | |
| |