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of by Your Lordship have been, or are being carried out, and in the course that all the necessary legislation has been provided.
2. on paragraph 3 Your Lordship says: "I observe that the ... Judge who takes the summary Court is only allowed the assistance of the Puisne Judge's Clerk. I presume that this occurs only when the Deputy Registrar cannot attend, as is proposed for the Chief Justice's Clerk in the case of the Court when sitting in its original jurisdiction, a proposal to which "I see no objection." It would appear that there must be some clerical error or omission here, for in Common with the Colonial Secretary, I have failed to assign any precise meaning to these words; and on reference to the Chief Justice (Sir George Phillippo), for an explanation, he also professes his inability to understand them, Unless it be that the Judge's Clerk will attend instead of the Deputy Registrars, when the latter are unavoidably absent. In this way the Puisne Judge is not worse off than the Chief Justice".