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John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)

All Quotes by John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)

“An universal custom is a law, and I know no distinction between lex mercatoria and consuetudo mercaborum.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“My judgment ought to be given for the plaintiff: but my brothers are all of another opinion, and so I submit to it. The defendant must have his judgment.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“I am far from being such a Judge as shall lay any intolerable yoke upon any one's neck.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“We cannot make a law, we must go according to the law. That must be our rule and direction.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“We cannot alter the law, we are bound by our oaths to proceed according to the law as it is at present.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“No counsel in the world that understand themselves, can argue anything against what has been often settled and always practised.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“It is expected you should do your best for those you are assigned for, as it is expected in any other case, that you do your duty for your client.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“We ought, as far as we can by law, to support the government of all societies and corporations, especially this of the city of London; and if the mayor and aldermen should not have power to punish offenders in a summary way, then farewell the government of the city.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“To excuse himself from damage, must say, was ready always and at all times.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“Libelling against a private man is a moral offence; but when it is against a government, it tends to the destruction of it.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“Rokeby, J.: I do not think but a Popish doctor may be a good doctor to a Protestant patient; but I do not think that a Popish governor can be a good governor for a Protestant subject.Holt, C.J.: Aye, but a Popish censor is not so proper to supervise and inspect all the Protestant physicians.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“A gentleman of Lincoln's-inn.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“The subject being unusual, I fear that I shall not make myself intelligible, but I will do my endeavour, that the reasons of our judgment may be apprehended.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“I do not pretend to dispense equity at large, but only by the consent of the parties, upon a rule of Court.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“We are not to issue process here as instruments or conduit-pipes, but judicially as Judges: and it will not be an objection to say, that we may award process at all hazards, and let the party grieved come after and plead to it; for we shall never grant an ill-writ, that the party may avoid it in pleading.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“A man may be reputed an able man this year, and yet be a beggar the next; it is a misfortune that happens to many men, and his former reputation will signify nothing.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“It is abominable to convict a man behind his back.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“We take notice of all feasts, and the almanack is part of the common law, the calendar being established by Act of Parliament, and it is published before the Common-prayer Book.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“Shall we indict one man for making a fool of another?”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“Shall we relieve a man, that trusts when he needs not?”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“It is a disparagement of the Government, who put an ill man into office.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“Whatever at common law might be amended in civil cases, was at common law amendable in criminal, and so it is at this day.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“He whose dirt it is must keep it that it may not trespass.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“Surely the navy must be the navy royal.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“I agree we ought not to incroach or inlarge our jurisdiction; by so doing we usurp both on the right of the Queen and the people.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“We must not be frighted when a matter of property comes before us by saying it belongs to the Parliament; we must exert the Queen's jurisdiction.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“Actual perceptible damage is not indispensable as the foundation of an action; it is sufficient to show the violation of a right, in which case the law will presume damage.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“It is a vain thing to imagine a right without a remedy; for want of right and want of remedy are reciprocal.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“It would look very strange, when the Commons of England are so fond of their right of sending representatives to Parliament, that it should be in the power of a sheriff, or other officer, to deprive them of that right, and yet that they should have no remedy; it is a thing to be admired at by all mankind.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“Where a man has but one remedy to come at his right, if he loses that he loses his right.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“Every man that is injured ought to have his recompence.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“If it be a matter within our jurisdiction, we are bound by our oaths to judge of it.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“If public officers will infringe men's rights, they ought to pay greater damages than other men, to deter and hinder other officers from the like offences.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)
“Let all people come in, and vote fairly; it is to support one or the other party, to deny any man's vote.”
— John Holt (Lord Chief Justice)