deodand การใช้
- Apparently this is an early instance analogous to deodand.
- If the owner could not pay the deodand, his township was held responsible.
- The transition from bane to deodand remains obscure.
- Had the railway itself been found to be deodand it would have bankrupted the company . | group = note }}
- The coroner's jury returned a verdict of accidental death in all cases, and a deodand of one thousand pounds on the engine, tender, and carriages.
- They therefore placed a deodand of one hundred pounds on the engine and its train and recommended that in future passenger trucks should be placed further away from the engine.
- I appeared in one of Harry's poems ( " damned deodand of bike and Jewess " ), which I immediately tucked into my wallet, and subsequent wallets, for years.
- Objects and animals found to be deodand were forfeit to the Crown, to be destroyed or cleansed by being put to a holy purpose, or a fine paid equivalent to the value of the deodand.
- Objects and animals found to be deodand were forfeit to the Crown, to be destroyed or cleansed by being put to a holy purpose, or a fine paid equivalent to the value of the deodand.
- The eager magician follows the girl through hills and valleys, chanting his spells to avoid or destroy the strange creatures he encounters; these include the Deodand ( a flesh-eating mutated man-creature ) and Thrang the ghoul-bear.
- Under this law, a chattel ( i . e . some personal property, such as a horse or a hay stack ) was considered a deodand whenever a coroner's jury decided that it had caused the death of a human being.
- The directors and engineers of the L & M were explicitly absolved of all blame, and no deodand was to be attached to the locomotive or the railway ., " to be given to God " ) was any object or animal considered to have caused a person's death.
- The coroner refused to reveal the basis on which deodand had been made, but subsequently it emerged that firstly, " " the jury are of opinion that great blame attached to the company in placing the passenger trucks so near the engine " ", and secondly " " that great neglect had occurred in not employing a sufficient watch when it was most necessarily required " ".
- In theory, deodands were forfeit to the crown, which was supposed to sell the chattel and then apply the profits to some pious use . ( The term deodand derives from the Latin phrase " deo dandum " which means " to be given to God . " ) In reality, the juries who decided that a particular animal or object was a deodand also appraised its value and the owners were expected to pay a fine equal to the value of the deodand.
- In theory, deodands were forfeit to the crown, which was supposed to sell the chattel and then apply the profits to some pious use . ( The term deodand derives from the Latin phrase " deo dandum " which means " to be given to God . " ) In reality, the juries who decided that a particular animal or object was a deodand also appraised its value and the owners were expected to pay a fine equal to the value of the deodand.
- In theory, deodands were forfeit to the crown, which was supposed to sell the chattel and then apply the profits to some pious use . ( The term deodand derives from the Latin phrase " deo dandum " which means " to be given to God . " ) In reality, the juries who decided that a particular animal or object was a deodand also appraised its value and the owners were expected to pay a fine equal to the value of the deodand.
- [T ] hat from and after the first day of September one thousand eight hundred and forty six there shall be no forfeiture of any chattel for or in respect of the same having moved to or caused the death of man; and no coroner s jury sworn to inquire, upon the sight of any dead body, how the deceased came by his death, shall find any forfeiture of any chattel which may have moved to or caused the death of the deceased, or any deodand whatsoever; and it shall not be necessary in any indictment or inquisition for homicide to allege the value of the instrument which caused the death of the deceased, or to allege that the same was of no value"