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Precedents*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2009

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Extract

It may seem odd at a crisis like this in the history of the empire and of mankind to be thinking and writing of academic questions of law, but the Editor has asked me to contribute an article to the University of Toronto Law Journal as a token of the sympathy and fellow-feeling of lawyers on both sides of the Atlantic. I am glad to be able to comply with his request and I do so also as a token of appreciation of the noble efforts that Canada is making for the cause which is so dear to the hearts of all of us. What Canada is doing is also being done by the other sister nations of the empire—the great Dominions—the colonies and India. All are united not by material or formal bonds, but by ties of kindred and by a common devotion to the cause of the free spirit and dignity of man, of the supremacy of law over tyranny, treachery, and brute force. The common law which binds together the English-speaking countries has been well called the law of the free peoples. We are confident that the forces of evil are ephemeral compared with that law. We can without impropriety forget for a brief space the pressing evils and dwell a little on that which will survive them, the common law.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge Law Journal and Contributors 1943

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References

1 Collected Papers (Cambridge, 1911), Vol. III, at pp. 435ff.Google Scholar

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3 At pp. 391–2.

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5 (1844) 10 C1. & F. 534.

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9 At pp. 380–1.

10 [1939] A. C. 215.

11 (1858) 3 Macq. 266.

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19 Ibid., at p. 458.

20 (1880) 13 Ch. D. 696.

21 (1778), 7 T. R. 350, note (a).

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