| Joseph Chitty - Criminal law - 1819 - 752 pages
...retire together, to some adjoining tavern, where accommodations are piepared for them, and the bailiffs are sworn " well and truly to keep the jury, and neither...them touching any matter relative to this trial." (t) The entry of [*629] the adjournment* must also, at least in prosecutions for misdemeanours, appear... | |
| Joseph Chitty - Criminal law - 1819 - 852 pages
...retire together, to some adjoining tavern, where accommodations are prepared for them, and the bailiffs are sworn " well and truly to keep the jury, and neither...to them touching any matter relative to this trial (z)." The entry of the adjournment *must also, at least in prosecutions for misdemeanours, appear [*629]... | |
| Esek Cowen - Justices of the peace - 1821 - 804 pages
...adjournment. Ton shrill well and truly keep this jury, and neither speak to the-n yourself, nor suffer any person to speak to them, touching any matter relative to this trial. (£) After the evidence is closed, the parties, by themselvei w counsel, may make such observations... | |
| New York (State). Supreme Court, Esek Cowen - Law reports, digests, etc - 1824 - 828 pages
...to an adjoining tavern, where accommodations were prepared for them, and the bailiffs were SWOTU " Well and truly to keep the jury, and neither to speak to them themselves, uor «ufi :r any other (a) Vid. Rycrs v. Hillyer, 1 Cninei, 1 12. Parkmon v. Sherman, id. 344. Satli-n... | |
| Edmund Hayes - Criminal law - 1837 - 758 pages
...place for entertainment, where they are kept together by one or more bailiffs, who have been previously sworn, "well and truly to keep the jury, and neither...them, touching any matter relative to this trial," It. v. Stone. If however, the indictment be for a misdemeanor, the judge may in his discretion permit... | |
| Henry G. Cotton - Justices of the peace - 1845 - 570 pages
...God, that you will well and truly keep this jury, and will not speak to them yourself, nor suffer any person to speak to them touching any matter relative to this trial, and return with them upon my order. Constable'* oath, on retiring with the jury to consider their verdict.... | |
| Richard Burn - Justices of the peace - 1845 - 1018 pages
...adjoining tavern, where accomnodatwns are prepared for them, and the bailiffs are sworn " well and inly to keep the jury, and neither to speak to them themselves, nor suf!tt an other person to speak to them, touching any matter relative to this wL" (RT Stunt, 6 TR 530.)... | |
| Edmund Hatch Bennett, Franklin Fiske Heard - Criminal law - 1857 - 642 pages
...tavern, where accommodations were prepared for them, and the bailiffs were sworn " well and truly to kcep the jury, and neither to speak to them themselves,...them touching any matter relative to this trial." The entry of the adjournment was in the following form : Thursday next, after, &c. Forasmuch as it... | |
| Amasa Junius Parker - Criminal law - 1860 - 720 pages
...retired to an adjoining tavern, where accommodations were prepared for them, and the bailiffs were sworn " well and truly to keep the jury, and neither...person to speak to them touching any matter relative to the trial." It is stated in a note to that case, that at the Old Bailey, in the latter end of 1794,... | |
| Virginia. Supreme Court of Appeals - Law reports, digests, etc - 1872 - 836 pages
...1 Chitty's Crim. Law, p. 628, 629. The author says, when the jury has been adjourned, the bailiffs are sworn " well and truly to keep the jury, and neither...touching any matter relative to this trial :" and he refers to 6 T. R. 530, 531. The case referred to is the case of The King v. Stone. In that case... | |
| |