| Karen Knop - 2002 - 460 páginas
...Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. 1948), or whatever else you choose to call them, are all, in the strictest sense, a trust; and it is of the very...the purposes for which alone it could have a lawful existence.344 Five years later, in the impeachment trial of the Governor-General of India, Warren Hastings,... | |
| Noah Feldman - 2009 - 176 páginas
...the holders, then such rights, or privileges, or whatever else you choose to call them, are all in the strictest sense a trust; and it is of the very...for which alone it could have a lawful existence." Edmund Burke, Speech on Fox's East India Bill, December 1, 1783, in The Writing and Speeches of Edmund... | |
| L. J. Hume - 2004 - 338 páginas
...their benefit. . . [Such] rights or privileges or whatever else you choose to call them, are all in the strictest sense a trust; and it is of the very...the purposes for which alone it could have a lawful existence.44 One function of the idea of trust or dépôt was thus to impose limits on the exercise... | |
| John B. Morrall - 2004 - 162 páginas
...short, these rights were a trust. They were neither unlimited nor unrestricted. Burke laid it down that 'it is of the very essence of every trust to be rendered...for which alone it could have a lawful existence'. 21 And he went on to assert 'that if the abuse is proved, the contract is broken; and we re-enter into... | |
| Ian Crowe - 2005 - 260 páginas
...had forfeited the Company's charter of special rights from the crown because such charters establish a trust "and it is of the very essence of every trust...for which alone it could have a lawful existence." In acceding to the East India Company's charter, Parliament had entered into a contract with it. And,... | |
| Christopher Leslie Brown - 2012 - 496 páginas
...some way or other exercised ultimately for their benefit"; every species of political dominion is "in the strictest sense a trust; and it is of the very...essence of every trust to be rendered accountable." To this end, he led from 1786 until 1795 a dramatic if unsuccessful attempt to convict former Bengal... | |
| Steven G. Ellis, Lud'a Klusáková - 2007 - 481 páginas
...privilege [...] then such rights or privileges, or whatever else you choose to call them, are all in the strictest sense a trust; and it is of the very...totally to cease, when it substantially varies from the purpose for which alone it could have a lawful existence37. In the mid-1 9th century, the apparent... | |
| Edmund Burke - 2008 - 602 páginas
...the holders, then such rights, or privileges, or whatever else you choose to call them, are all in the strictest sense a trust : and it is of the very...to be rendered accountable, — and even totally to <jease, when it substantially varies from the purposes for which alone it could have a lawful existence.... | |
| Edmund Burke - 2008 - 602 páginas
...the holders, then such rights, or privileges, or whatever else you choose to call them, are all in the strictest sense a trust : and it is of the very...This I conceive, Sir, to be true of trusts of power Tested in the highest hands, and of such as seem to hold of no human creature. But about the application... | |
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