If a. surgeon was voluntarily to reveal these secrets, to be sure, he would be guilty of a breach of honor and of great indiscretion ; but to give that information in a court of justice, which by the law of the land he is bound to do, will never be imputed... The American Jurist and Law Magazine - Page 3021837Full view - About this book
| William Sampson - Catholics - 1813 - 278 pages
...justification to all the world. " If a surgeon was voluntarily to reveal these secrets, '< to be sure he would be guilty of a breach of honor, " and of...court of justice, which by the law of the land he !t is bound to do, will never be imputed to him as any "indiscretion whatever," The question was then... | |
| Thomas Bayly Howell - Trials - 1814 - 730 pages
...to lie sure he would be guilty of a breach of hoDOur, and of great indiscretion ; hut, to give tbat information in a court of justice, which by the law of the land he is bound to do, will never be imputed to him as any indiscretion whatever.* * See in the Case of Annesley r. the... | |
| Trials - 1816 - 742 pages
...surgeon was voluntarily to reveal these secrets, to be sure be would 'be guilty of a breach of honour, and of great indiscretion ; but, to give that information...justice, which by the law of the land he is bound to do, will never be imputed tu him as any indiscretion whatever.* * See in the Case of Annesley o. the... | |
| T. B. Howell, Esq. - 1816 - 804 pages
...surgeon was voluntarily to reveal these secrets, to be sure he would be guilty of a breach of honour, and of great indiscretion ; but, to give that information...justice, which by the law of the' land he is bound to do, will never be imputed to him аз any indiscretion whatever.* * See in the Case of Annesley v.... | |
| Trials - 1816 - 722 pages
...fecrels, to tie sure he would be guilty of a breach of honour, and »1 ц rent indiscretion ; (ml, to give that information in a court of justice, which by the law of the land he is bound to do, will never he imputed to him из any indiscretion whatever.* * See in the Case of Annesley v.... | |
| Trials - 1816 - 724 pages
...surgeon was voluntarily to reveal these secrets, to be sure he would be guilty of a breach of honour, und of great indiscretion ; but, to give that information in a court of justice, which by the laiv of the land he is bound to do, will never be imputed to him as any indiscretion whatever.' * See... | |
| John Ayrton Paris, John Samuel Martin Fonblanque - Medical jurisprudence - 1823 - 556 pages
...Surgeon was voluntarily to re" veal these secrets, to be sure he would be guilty of " a breach of honour, and of great indiscretion ; but, " to give that information in a Court of Justice, •" which by the 1/w of the land he is bound to do, " will never be imputed to him as any indiscretion " whatever."... | |
| Zoology - 1926 - 748 pages
...voluntarily to reveal those secrets to be sure he would be guilty of a breach of honour and of a grave indiscretion ; but to give that information in a court...justice, which by the law of the land he is bound to do, would never be imputed to him as any indiscretion whatever." Of late years there has been a tendency... | |
| 1837 - 1016 pages
...surgeon was voluntarily to reveal those secrets, to be sure he would be guilty of a breach of honour, and of great indiscretion ; but to give that information in a court of justice, u-liirh by l/i« law of the land he is bound in ¡In. will never be imputed to him as any indiscretion... | |
| Massachusetts Medical Society - 1854 - 680 pages
...clear justification to the world. If a surgeon was voluntarily to reveal these secrets, to be sure he would be guilty of a breach of honor and of great...justice, which, by the law of the land, he is bound to do, will never be imputed to him as any indiscretion whatever." Thus there is no appeal. Those facts... | |
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