| Alexander James Dallas - 1906 - 458 頁
...any other potentate upon earth. Hence it is, that no suit or action can be brought against the King, even in civil matters ; because no court can have jurisdiction over him : for all jurisdiction implies superiority of power." This last position is only a branch of a much... | |
| James Brown Scott, United States. Supreme Court - 1919 - 572 頁
...any other potentate upon earth. Hence it is, that no suit or action can be brought against the King, even in civil matters ; because no Court can have jurisdiction over him : for all jurisdiction implies superiority of power '.3 The principle to be derived from this, Mr.... | |
| Lawrence Boyd Evans - 1922 - 974 頁
...to any other potentate on earth. Hence it is that no suit or action can be brought against the king, even in civil matters, because no Court can have jurisdiction over him. For all jurisdiction implies superiority of power; authority to try would be vain and idle without... | |
| Charles Lamb - 1924 - 196 頁
...commons ; and to interpret, by his judges, in statutes and cases which are not defined by law. But though he be entrusted with the whole executive power...brought against him even in civil matters, because no couH can have jurisdiction over him. The law also ascribes to the king, in his political capacity,... | |
| Westel Woodbury Willoughby - 1924 - 530 頁
...any other potentate upon earth. Hence it is, that no suit or action can be brought against the King, even in civil matters, because no court can have jurisdiction over him. For all jurisdiction implies superiority of power: authority to try would be vain and idle, without... | |
| United States. Supreme Court - 1926 - 950 頁
...any other potentate upon earth. Hence, it is, that no suit or action can be brought against the king, even in civil matters; because no court can have jurisdiction over him: for all jurisdiction implies superiority of power." 'Пик last position is only a branca of a much... | |
| Sir David Lindsay Keir, Frederick Henry Lawson - 1928 - 520 頁
...to any other potentate on earth. Hence it is that no suit or action can be brought against the King, even in civil matters, because no Court can have jurisdiction over him. For all jurisdiction implies superiority of power ; authority to try would be vain and idle without... | |
| New Brunswick. Supreme Court - 1877 - 748 頁
...cannot sit in judgment in any Court. It is laid down in Bac. Abr. "Courts" (BJ that " the King himself, though he be entrusted with the whole executive power of the law, cannot sit in judgment in any Court, but his justice, and the laws, must be administered according... | |
| Great Britain. Courts - 1883 - 650 頁
...potentate on earth. VOL. IV., NS Hence it is that no suit or action can be brought against tbe King even in civil matters, because no court can have jurisdiction over him ; for all jurisdiction implies superiority of power. Authority to try would be vain and idle without... | |
| United States. Congress. Joint Committee on Atomic Energy - 1955 - 114 頁
...stems from the ancient proposition that: "* * * [N]o suit or action can be brought against the king even in civil matters, because no court- can have jurisdiction over him * * *" (1 Cooley's Blackstone 212). Cooley cites American precedents including Gibbons v. US ((1868)... | |
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