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19tor
refer to the recent judgment I gave in the extradition case.
The total amount of time occupied by the mere physical prepara-
-tion of that judgment I should estimate at mot less than 12
hours; reading reports, drafting, copying, re-writing, and often
typing myself; and the work is not yet finished, for there are
proofs to correct and the judgment has to be finally revised
for the Reports. I can give even better example. Last year Mr.
Slade was absent from the Colony during term time for about
three weeks. The whole of that time was occupied (I mean every
day and from 10 to 4 every day) in preparing two long judgments
in cases which had just been argued
T
they are reported in the
Colonial Reports, Vol. II at pages 64 and 95 - I may say in
this connexion that if Mr. Slade had not gone away I hardly
know where the time would have come from to deal properly with
the difficult questions raised in these cases which had come on
one after the other. Further, though I hope this is unnecessary
for me to state, a Judge's work, like an administrator's, never
leaves him; he must be perpetually thinking out the problems
which have been propounded in the Court, at least, if he hopes
ever to do justice by the parties. I think it is popularly
supposed that when a Judge leaves Court he can go and enjoy
himself, and that his judgments prepare themselves.
But as to the Court, here again the popular
Ano
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