| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - Great Britain - 1877 - 408 pages
...to bail. Six of the number accordingly, Selden, Valentine, Holies, Strode, Hobart,1 and Long applied to the Court of King's Bench for a writ of Habeas corpus. Eliot took no part in the demand, thinking, perhaps, that the Judges would be more likely to give fair... | |
| Cyril Ransome - Constitutional history - 1883 - 292 pages
...prison. To appeal to the judges of the land for redress was the next step, and the five gentlemen applied to the Court of King's Bench for a writ of habeas corpus ; but, as in Bates' case, the judges preferred the pleasure of the king to the rights of their fellow-subjects,... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - Great Britain - 1884 - 434 pages
...any assistance to the Oct *6 establishment of a constant and settled government. chamber' He applied to the Court of King's Bench for a "" writ of habeas corpus. For the first time the judges were called upon to exercise the authority secured to them by the Petition... | |
| Leslie Stephen - Great Britain - 1886 - 480 pages
...five gentlemen who had been thrown into prison for refusing to contribute to the forced loan applied to the court of king's bench for a writ of habeas corpus, Calthorpe was counsel for Sir Thomas Darnell, being associated in the case with Noy, Serjeant Bramston,... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - Great Britain - 1886 - 414 pages
...bail. Six of the number accordingly—Selden, Valentine, Holles, Strode, Hobart, 1 and Long—applied to the Court of King's Bench for a writ of Habeas corpus. Eliot took no part in the demand, thinking, perhaps, that the judges would be more likely to give fair... | |
| Great Britain. State Trials Committee - Trials - 1889 - 590 pages
...Old Bailey, before the Recorder of London and a common jury, on January 10, 1831 ..- 459 Application to the Court of King's Bench for a writ of habeas corpus on January 29, 1831 ........... CIS Motion for arrest of judgment in the Court of King's Bench on May... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - Great Britain - 1899 - 476 pages
...Six of the number accordingly — Selden, Valentine, Holies, Strode, Hobart,1 and Long — applied to the Court of King's Bench for a writ of Habeas corpus. Eliot took no part in the demand, thinking, perhaps, that the judges would be more likely to give fair... | |
| Sir Adolphus William Ward, George Walter Prothero, Sir Stanley Mordaunt Leathes - History, Modern - 1906 - 1152 pages
...honoured names of Darnel, Erie, Corbet, Heveningham, and Edmund Hampden, appealed in November, 1627, to the Court of King's Bench for a writ of Habeas Corpus, demanding that the cause of their imprisonment should be shown. The trial that followed is notable,... | |
| Sir John Arthur Ransome Marriott - Administrative law - 1910 - 362 pages
...committed to prison by the Privy Council for refusal to contribute to the forced loan of 1626 appealed to the Court of King's Bench for a writ of Habeas Corpus. Relying on the clause of Magna Carta which declared that ' no man shall be imprisoned except by the... | |
| Cyril Ransome - Great Britain - 1911 - 1122 pages
...case, five knights, who had been imprisoned for refusing to contribute to the loan, joined in appealing to the court of king's bench for a writ of Habeas Corpus with a view of obtaining their release, on the ground that they had committed no offence which would... | |
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