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on his designs for the railway and the surveys on which they were based. Alderson proved an able advocate and
Stephenson a poor witness. Stephenson later confessed, "I was not long in the witness box before I began to wish for a hole to creep out at." Largely owing to Alderson's devastating closing
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https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3424&context=scholarly_works#:~:text=The%20rule%20in%20Hodge's%20Case%20is%2C%20therefore%2C%20a%20kind%20of,test%20his%20or%20her%20inferences
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in adapting to the changing times. According to Hedley, he was popular and jocular, a "clever, analytical, and forthright judge, with little patience for those of lesser abilities". He never sought to be a
380:(1838), 2 Lewin 227, 168 E.R. 1136 - an explanation to the jury of the meaning and dangers of circumstantial evidence, required to be given as a separate direction to the jury until 1973.
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for witnesses but opposed the growing contemporary campaign for secular education. Hedley describes
Alderson as a "Conservative... suspicious of the 'tyranny' he saw in democracy".
833:
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370:(1836) 7 C. & P. 303 continues to be used in modern criminal cases in England and Wales as having laid down the criteria for assessing a defendant's
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assizes in
December 1856, he heard of a serious injury to one of his sons and collapsed. He died the following January at his London home from a
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and argued for the limitation of capital punishment, himself seeking to disapply it, by whatever technical means he could creatively devise.
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447:(1841) – Distinguished patenting a principle (impermissible) from patenting a physical implementation of a principle (permissible)
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speech, the bill was lost, the railway was delayed for several years and
Stephenson's early reputation badly damaged.
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Hurry who died in 1791. Alderson suffered an unstable childhood, variously living with relatives, unhappily attending
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639:
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111:. During free time he became an ardent debater and avid reader; winning Middle Bachelors, and the Latin Prize for
194:
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Selections From the
Charges and Other Detached Papers of Baron Alderson. With an Introductory Notice of His Life
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150:
from 1817 to 1822. On 26 October 1823 he married
Georgina Drewe (died 1871) and the couple had many children.
99:, about to take exams he heard of the sad death of his sister Isabella. A year later in 1809 he graduated as
823:
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An early indication of his abilities came in 1825 when he was instructed by opponents of the proposed
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and began work on the northern circuit where he established a substantial practice. He joined with
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be produced in court. The horse could not be found and the result of the race was overturned.
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11 September 1787 – 27 January 1857) was an
English lawyer and judge whose many judgments on
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which held that the Church was subject to secular law. He was a noted advocate of
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in setting judicial standards for the appropriate level of care owed to another.
738:
451:
341:, opposed the marriage owing to Georgina's lack of wealth and social standing.
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68:
37:
802:
750:
Gentlemen and
Blackguards: Gambling Mania and Plot to Steal the Derby of 1844
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The Annual
Register, or a View of the History and Politics of the Year 1844
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Archbold
Criminal Pleading, Evidence and Practice 2014, 4–235 at page 431
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Grenville, J. A. S. (2001) "Salisbury, Robert Arthur Talbot...."
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299:. He was also an enthusiastic and knowledgeable follower of
793:
The trial of Feargus O'Connor and 58 other Chartists – 1843
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630:(2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp.
476:
Blyth v Company Proprietors of the Birmingham Water Works
429:(1853) – Alderson suggested, contrary to precedent but
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by a pedestrian who was injured by a defective vehicle.
71:, Alderson was the eldest son of Robert (died 1833), a
40:
helped to shape the emerging British capitalism of the
752:. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. Ch.17–19.
625:
213:
in 1841. He was an advocate of the plasticity of the
545:
George and Robert Stephenson: The Railway Revolution
408:(1844) – in a trial to determine the winner of the
766:, Oxford University Press, accessed 22 July 2007
173:needed to establish the railway. Alderson was to
834:Fellows of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge
800:
388:(1842) – Reasserted the traditional doctrine of
335:Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury
829:Alumni of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge
736:
339:James Gascoyne-Cecil, 2nd Marquess of Salisbury
758:Alderson, Sir Edward Hall (bap. 1787, d. 1857)
697:. Sydney: Law Book Co. Ltd. pp. 324–325.
692:
314:. He was buried at St Mary Magdalen's Church,
412:, Alderson ordered that the purported winner
295:, and corresponded with his cousin, novelist
542:
91:. He was an able student of mathematics and
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458:Knight (Clerk) v. The Marquess of Waterford
113:Comparison of Ancient Dialogues with Modern
467:(1854) – Defined the scope of contractual
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287:Alderson established homes in London and
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763:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
479:(1856) – Introduced the concept of the
238:he was instrumental in suppressing the
87:but, more positively, being tutored by
864:People educated at Charterhouse School
801:
291:where he wrote poetry, in English and
115:. In his finals year he also won the
795:– a trial at which Alderson was judge
547:. London: Penguin. pp. 109–112.
494:
97:Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge
743:. London: John W. Parker & Son.
526:"Alderson, Edward Hall (ALDR804EH)"
254:. He was dubious of the effects of
157:, principally the directors of the
13:
184:
14:
875:
777:
626:Lunney, M.; Oliphant, K. (2003).
209:in 1834, and transferred to the
155:Liverpool and Manchester Railway
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686:
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123:. He was consequently elected
51:and so held the honorary title
664:. London: Rivington. pp.
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189:Alderson was appointed to the
1:
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337:in 1857. Salisbury's father,
62:
844:Justices of the Common Pleas
770:UK public library membership
197:in 1830, with the attendant
7:
819:19th-century English judges
628:Tort Law:Text and Materials
530:A Cambridge Alumni Database
193:in 1828 and a judge of the
109:Chancellor's Gold Medallist
107:, was First Medallist, and
10:
880:
859:People from Great Yarmouth
532:. University of Cambridge.
250:was the principal goal of
165:, as their counsel in the
163:Leeds and Liverpool Canals
437:priest-penitent privilege
280:as an alternative to the
272:, Alderson supported the
222:or Member of Parliament.
784:Works by Edward Alderson
737:Alderson, C. H. (1858).
435:, that the principle of
355:
350:Clerk to the Parliaments
261:An active member of the
30:Sir Edward Hall Alderson
16:English lawyer and judge
849:Barons of the Exchequer
693:McNicol, S. B. (1992).
591:"Sir Edward Alderson",
579:Encyclopædia Britannica
352:between 1930 and 1934.
270:Charles James Blomfield
582:Deluxe Edition CD-ROM.
567:Foulkes (2010), p. 213
385:Winterbottom v. Wright
265:and a close friend of
226:Personality and family
203:Baron of the Exchequer
121:Senior Bachelors Prize
49:Baron of the Exchequer
26:
595:, 9 March 1951, p. 8.
543:Rolt, L.T.C. (1960).
420:R v. Serva and others
325:Alderson's daughter,
195:Court of Common Pleas
191:Common Law Commission
24:
748:Foulkes, N. (2010).
364:- oath of abjuration
756:Hedley, S. (2004) "
439:applied in England.
390:privity of contract
362:Miller v. Salomons
246:, he believed that
85:Charterhouse School
464:Hadley v Baxendale
329:, married British
207:Exchequer of Pleas
27:
824:English Anglicans
788:Project Gutenberg
768:(subscription or
481:reasonable person
444:Neilson v Harford
306:While sitting at
263:Church of England
211:Court of Chancery
178:George Stephenson
144:Richard Barnewall
136:called to the bar
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854:Knights Bachelor
839:Senior Wranglers
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695:Law of Privilege
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471:in English law.
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346:Edward Alderson
320:Bury St Edmunds
274:Gorham judgment
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220:Queen's Counsel
187:
185:Judicial career
167:committee stage
138:in 1811 at the
134:, Alderson was
101:senior wrangler
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344:His grandson,
248:rehabilitation
230:Although as a
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201:. He became a
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69:Great Yarmouth
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38:commercial law
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432:obiter dicta
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426:R v. Griffin
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378:Hodge’s Case
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348:, served as
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148:law reporter
140:Inner Temple
129:
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814:1857 deaths
809:1787 births
405:Wood v Peel
297:Amelia Opie
278:affirmation
159:Bridgewater
130:A pupil of
57:Alderson, B
55:, in print
803:Categories
488:References
396:claim for
394:negligence
256:deterrence
252:sentencing
215:common law
199:knighthood
63:Early life
772:required)
723:Law Times
656:Burke, E.
593:The Times
331:statesman
308:Liverpool
289:Lowestoft
244:Chartists
73:barrister
47:He was a
725:31 Jan,
668:350–352.
658:(1845).
327:Georgina
240:Luddites
232:criminal
103:, First
93:classics
77:recorder
67:Born in
34:baptised
721:(1857)
634:91–91.
469:damages
398:damages
318:, near
236:assizes
205:in the
169:of the
701:
638:
551:
125:fellow
119:, and
410:Derby
356:Cases
316:Risby
293:Latin
146:as a
699:ISBN
636:ISBN
549:ISBN
282:oath
242:and
161:and
75:and
786:at
760:",
733:266
95:at
81:née
805::
731:p.
727:p.
666:pp
632:pp
528:.
496:^
333:,
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670:(
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32:(
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