CO129-123 - Sir MacDonnell - 1867 [7] — Page 436

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All AI Reviewed

1

to you or talking you down; you will do your duty and I will do mine. I meant, as you must have known, indeed, I believe I added that you would call or not call witnesses according to your duty, and that I in directing the jury would do mine in directing them to make the proper inferences from your keeping back such a witness. What you said, added to your tone and manner, inferred that I had improperly dictated to you, and that I had improperly attempted to talk you down. This was your second contempt of court. Now there at least should have been an end, but acting on your all but universal rule you would and did reply to me, and you said, "That is all right if we would only stick to it" in a tone and with a manner which inferred and must have been meant to infer that I would not. Now, this was your third contempt of court. By this time your manner towards me appeared to me to be violent, and your general bearing was such as that I felt the cause could not then proceed with any chance of justice. I felt that the court had been grievously insulted. I felt it to be my duty then and there either to have committed or to have imposed a fine on you, but at the same time I feared that anger might be present in my mind, and I left the bench as the least evil before me, and to avoid what from experience I had too much reason to expect—a continuance of insult. After an absence which I now wish had been longer, I returned to the bench. On my return, your manner was contemptuous towards me. Not noticing that, I asked whether you would apologise. Your curt notice of this was, "For what, my Lord?" You then went into wide generalities that if you had offended, no one was more willing to admit it and apologise. You then referred to my having asked you if you would produce a witness, on which I said that you had tauntingly told the court a witness was not a piece of paper, as if I did not know a witness was not a piece of paper.

Mr. Pollard—Open my Lord, but with cause.

Chief Justice—I will put that down. Thereupon you said, admitting inferentially that you had said so, but still in a defiant manner, "Is it that you wish me to apologise for." I said yes, and that there were other matters requiring an apology, and you proceeded to address me in a manner and tone as offensive as before, from which I felt satisfied, your only object was to get me into a most unseemly wrangle. Not choosing to trust myself then to punish the contempt as I felt was necessary, and feeling that until you had apologised, or at least in the then state of excitement and indecorum into which the proceedings had been thrown, the cause could not properly be proceeded with,

I adjourned the court as the least objectional course. You then, still persevering in your defiant tone, protested against the adjournment as being entirely without precedent. I said I should adjourn the court till Saturday (the Friday being a holiday), adding "as we cannot get on in the present circumstances," and you still, as if you had not caused what happened, desired me to take a note of your objection. You then said, if I have done any wrong there are certain steps which may be taken by the court, and you requested me to take a note of your objection. By this language you adopted deliberately all you had previously said, and, so far from apologising, courted the consequences on yourself personally of your contempts. I replied there were such steps, but that I would not then take them. You proceeded, and I had peremptorily to say "silence, sir." I said you would not dare to use elsewhere such language as you had used. I added the court is adjourned. Still you persisted in renewing your unseemly language to the court, addressing me after I had requested you to be silent and after I had adjourned the court. One of your observations was, "I always answer when I am attacked and not without." Your speaking at all was an indecorum: what you said was a contempt in imputing to the court that it had attacked you, which was the converse of what had occurred. I consider this your fourth contempt.

I was thus, by what you said after the court was adjourned, driven to adjourn the case so far indefinitely, and I said I could not hear it, you being counsel, till you should have apologised. I am glad to find that the cause out of which the above occurrences arose has been referred to arbitration, because I feel sure that the arbitrators will decide according to the very right of the case, which unfortunately this court being tied by technical rules applicable to another state of society can scarcely do. On Saturday another case came on in which you again appeared as counsel. I having previously directed the Acting Registrar to communicate with you my intention to give a decision unless you previously apologised. I asked if any gentleman had anything to say in reference to Thursday. You were present, looking very indignantly at me, but said nothing. I then shortly referred to and cited the leading cases, shewing that ex necessitate I was bound to punish an insult to the court, and advised consideration of those cases to persons interested in the matter. My intention was obviously to give you another opportunity after referring to the law to apologise. I said I would give my decision on Monday, and that you had due notice. You, taking the matter as one of dry notice, said, "I have received no notice." It seemed that the Acting Registrar had told you I should give my decision, but he omitted to say on Monday, as I had intended he should. The spirit in which the objection that you had not received notice was made satisfied me that you did not understand what had passed in its true bearings.

Having obtained leave to address me, you began thus, "Merely this, my Lord, I don't seek to be aggressive." This language under the circumstances of your being before me as charged with contempt, was a contempt, and I designate it your fifth contempt. You proceeded, "it is the bench I respect." This was said in a tone which clearly inferred and was meant to infer that it was the bench as distinguished from its occupant that you, a Queen's Counsel, had such respect for as you professed to have. This was a contempt according to the highest authority of a very grave character. This was your sixth contempt. You then proceeded to say that you had done nothing which could be properly called an insult. You then sat down and continued to address me, sitting on, and I had to request you to stand whilst you addressed the court. You then said that was all you had to say.—

[Mr. Pollard here raised his hands to the back of his neck to fasten some part of his dress.]

When you are ready Mr. Pollard I will proceed.

Mr. Pollard.—My Lord, the button of my band came unfastened, and I was afraid it would fall off, and that might be another contempt of court.

Chief Justice—I will wait until your band is right; it is very proper you have it so. I give you credit for having uniformly insisted, as you did in your defence, that you have said and done nothing which can properly be called an insult to the court. I have no desire to conceal the fact that the difficulty you have imposed on me has very deeply pained me ever since Thursday last, and that it will continue greatly to pain me, probably more than it will pain you, not because I am anxious as to my own personal position other than as it is important to sustain the judicial status in this colony, but because I respect your legal learning, and because our own forensic contests have left on my mind pleasant remembrances of kindly feelings towards you, which even present circumstances cannot change, and because you have many qualities which deservedly make you popular. If in duty to my office I could have overlooked your conduct, I would have done so, but to mark my sense of your conduct is, in the words of Mr. Justice Holroyd, a duty which I owe to the station to which I belong. You say you have never insulted the court. Whether you are justified in distinguishing the court and its successive occupants in that language, I leave for you to consider at leisure; you have insulted me, and in insulting me, you have insulted the court. I may add that the more humble is the occupant of the bench for the time, the less learned and competent he may be for his office, the more important is it to surround him with those forms of respect which have been devised to support authority against those who would usurp, subvert, or destroy it.

I now proceed to pronounce my decision as ex necessitate rei, the only judge of fact and law. I pronounce you guilty of grave contempts, and as from equal necessity, this is the only tribunal

431

EX.

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1 to you or talking you down; you will do your duty and I will do mine. I meant, as you must have known, indeed, I believe I added that you would call or not call witnesses according to your duty, and that I in directing the jury would do mine in directing them to make the proper inferences from your keeping back such a witness. What you said, added to your tone and manner, inferred that I had improperly dictated to you, and that I had improperly attempted to talk you down. This was your second contempt of court. Now there at least should have been an end, but acting on your all but universal rule you would and did reply to me, and you said, "That is all right if we would only stick to it" in a tone and with a manner which inferred and must have been meant to infer that I would not. Now, this was your third contempt of court. By this time your manner towards me appeared to me to be violent, and your general bearing was such as that I felt the cause could not then proceed with any chance of justice. I felt that the court had been grievously insulted. I felt it to be my duty then and there either to have committed or to have imposed a fine on you, but at the same time I feared that anger might be present in my mind, and I left the bench as the least evil before me, and to avoid what from experience I had too much reason to expect—a continuance of insult. After an absence which I now wish had been longer, I returned to the bench. On my return, your manner was contemptuous towards me. Not noticing that, I asked whether you would apologise. Your curt notice of this was, "For what, my Lord?" You then went into wide generalities that if you had offended, no one was more willing to admit it and apologise. You then referred to my having asked you if you would produce a witness, on which I said that you had tauntingly told the court a witness was not a piece of paper, as if I did not know a witness was not a piece of paper. Mr. Pollard—Open my Lord, but with cause. Chief Justice—I will put that down. Thereupon you said, admitting inferentially that you had said so, but still in a defiant manner, "Is it that you wish me to apologise for." I said yes, and that there were other matters requiring an apology, and you proceeded to address me in a manner and tone as offensive as before, from which I felt satisfied, your only object was to get me into a most unseemly wrangle. Not choosing to trust myself then to punish the contempt as I felt was necessary, and feeling that until you had apologised, or at least in the then state of excitement and indecorum into which the proceedings had been thrown, the cause could not properly be proceeded with, I adjourned the court as the least objectional course. You then, still persevering in your defiant tone, protested against the adjournment as being entirely without precedent. I said I should adjourn the court till Saturday (the Friday being a holiday), adding "as we cannot get on in the present circumstances," and you still, as if you had not caused what happened, desired me to take a note of your objection. You then said, if I have done any wrong there are certain steps which may be taken by the court, and you requested me to take a note of your objection. By this language you adopted deliberately all you had previously said, and, so far from apologising, courted the consequences on yourself personally of your contempts. I replied there were such steps, but that I would not then take them. You proceeded, and I had peremptorily to say "silence, sir." I said you would not dare to use elsewhere such language as you had used. I added the court is adjourned. Still you persisted in renewing your unseemly language to the court, addressing me after I had requested you to be silent and after I had adjourned the court. One of your observations was, "I always answer when I am attacked and not without." Your speaking at all was an indecorum: what you said was a contempt in imputing to the court that it had attacked you, which was the converse of what had occurred. I consider this your fourth contempt. I was thus, by what you said after the court was adjourned, driven to adjourn the case so far indefinitely, and I said I could not hear it, you being counsel, till you should have apologised. I am glad to find that the cause out of which the above occurrences arose has been referred to arbitration, because I feel sure that the arbitrators will decide according to the very right of the case, which unfortunately this court being tied by technical rules applicable to another state of society can scarcely do. On Saturday another case came on in which you again appeared as counsel. I having previously directed the Acting Registrar to communicate with you my intention to give a decision unless you previously apologised. I asked if any gentleman had anything to say in reference to Thursday. You were present, looking very indignantly at me, but said nothing. I then shortly referred to and cited the leading cases, shewing that ex necessitate I was bound to punish an insult to the court, and advised consideration of those cases to persons interested in the matter. My intention was obviously to give you another opportunity after referring to the law to apologise. I said I would give my decision on Monday, and that you had due notice. You, taking the matter as one of dry notice, said, "I have received no notice." It seemed that the Acting Registrar had told you I should give my decision, but he omitted to say on Monday, as I had intended he should. The spirit in which the objection that you had not received notice was made satisfied me that you did not understand what had passed in its true bearings. Having obtained leave to address me, you began thus, "Merely this, my Lord, I don't seek to be aggressive." This language under the circumstances of your being before me as charged with contempt, was a contempt, and I designate it your fifth contempt. You proceeded, "it is the bench I respect." This was said in a tone which clearly inferred and was meant to infer that it was the bench as distinguished from its occupant that you, a Queen's Counsel, had such respect for as you professed to have. This was a contempt according to the highest authority of a very grave character. This was your sixth contempt. You then proceeded to say that you had done nothing which could be properly called an insult. You then sat down and continued to address me, sitting on, and I had to request you to stand whilst you addressed the court. You then said that was all you had to say.— [Mr. Pollard here raised his hands to the back of his neck to fasten some part of his dress.] When you are ready Mr. Pollard I will proceed. Mr. Pollard.—My Lord, the button of my band came unfastened, and I was afraid it would fall off, and that might be another contempt of court. Chief Justice—I will wait until your band is right; it is very proper you have it so. I give you credit for having uniformly insisted, as you did in your defence, that you have said and done nothing which can properly be called an insult to the court. I have no desire to conceal the fact that the difficulty you have imposed on me has very deeply pained me ever since Thursday last, and that it will continue greatly to pain me, probably more than it will pain you, not because I am anxious as to my own personal position other than as it is important to sustain the judicial status in this colony, but because I respect your legal learning, and because our own forensic contests have left on my mind pleasant remembrances of kindly feelings towards you, which even present circumstances cannot change, and because you have many qualities which deservedly make you popular. If in duty to my office I could have overlooked your conduct, I would have done so, but to mark my sense of your conduct is, in the words of Mr. Justice Holroyd, a duty which I owe to the station to which I belong. You say you have never insulted the court. Whether you are justified in distinguishing the court and its successive occupants in that language, I leave for you to consider at leisure; you have insulted me, and in insulting me, you have insulted the court. I may add that the more humble is the occupant of the bench for the time, the less learned and competent he may be for his office, the more important is it to surround him with those forms of respect which have been devised to support authority against those who would usurp, subvert, or destroy it. I now proceed to pronounce my decision as ex necessitate rei, the only judge of fact and law. I pronounce you guilty of grave contempts, and as from equal necessity, this is the only tribunal 431 EX.
Baseline (Original)
1 to you or talking you down; you will do your duty and I will do mine. I meant, as you must have known, indeed, I believe I added that you would call or not call witnesses according to your duty, and that I in directing the jury would do mine in directing them to make the proper inferences from your keeping back such a wit- n1e88. what you said, added to your tone and manner, inferred that I had improperly dictated to you, and that I had improperly attempted to talk you down. This was your second con- tempt of court. Now there at least should have been an end, but acting on your all but univer- sal rule you would and did reply to me, and you said, "That is all right if we would only stick to it" in a tone and with a manner which inferred and must have been meant to infer that I would not. Now, this was your third contempt of court. By this time your manner towards me appeared to me to be violent, and your ! general bearing was such as that I felt the cause could not then proceed with any chance of jus tice. I felt that the court had been grievously insulted. I felt it to be my duty then and there either to have committed or to have imposed a fine on you, but at the same time I feared that anger might be present in my mind, and I left the bench as the least evil before me, and to avoid what from experience I had too much reason to expecta continuance of insult, After an ab.. sence which I now wish had been longer. I returned to the bench. On my return, your manner was contemptuous towards me. Not noticing that, I asked whether you would apolo. gise. Your curt notice of this was, For what, my Lord" You then went into wide generalities that if yon bad offended, no one was more willing to admit it and apologise. You then referred to my having asked you if you would produce a witness, on which I said that you had tauntingly told the court a witness was not a piece of paper, as if I did not know a witness was not a piece of paper. Mr. Pollard your eyes are opened very wide Mr. Pollard-Open my Lord, but with cause. Chief-Justice I will put that down. There- upon you said, admitting inferentially that you bad said 80, but still in a defiant manner," Is it that you wish me to apologise for." I said yes, sad that there were other matters requiring an apology, and you proceeded to address me In 2 manner and tone as offensive as before from which I felt satisfied, your only object was to get me into a most unseemly wrangle. Not choosing to trust myself then to punish the contempt as I felt was necessary, and feeling that until you had apologised, or at least in the then state of excitement and indecorum into which the proceedings had been thrown the cause could not properly be proceeded with, I adjourned the court as the least objectional course. You then, still persevering in your defiant tone, protested against the adjournment as being entirely without precedent. I said I should adjourn the court till Saturday (the Friday being a holiday, adding "as we cannot get on in the present circumstances," and you still, as if you had not caused, what happened, desired me to take a note of your objection. You then said, if I have done any wrong there are certain steps which may be taken by the court, and you requested me to take a note of your objection. By this language you anopted deliberately all you had previously said, and, so far from apologising, courted the consequences on yourself personally of your contempts. I replied there were such steps, but that I would not then take them. You proceeded, and I had peremptorily to say silence, sir. I said you would not dare to use elsewhere such language as you had used. I added the court is adjourned. Still you persisted in re- newing your unseemly language to the court, addressing me after I had requested you to be silent and after I had adjourned the court. One of your observations was, I always answer when I am attacked and not without. Your speak- ing at all was an indecorum: what you said was a contempt in imputing to the court that it had attacked you, which was the converse of what had occurred. I consider this your fourth contempt. I was thus, by what you said after the court was adjourned, driven to adjourn the case so far indefinitely, and I said I could not hear it, you being counsel, till you should have apologised. I am glad to find that the cause out of which the above occur. rences arose has been referred to arbitration, because I feel sure that the arbitrators will decide according to the 'very right of the case, which unfortunately this court being tied by technical rules applicable to another state of society can scarcely do. On Saturday an- other case came, on in which you again appeared As counsel. I having previously directed the Acting Registrar to communicate with you my intention to give a decision unless you previously apologised. I asked if any gentle. raan had anything to say in reference to Thurs- day. You were present, looking very indignantly at me, but said nothing. I then shortly referred to and cited the leading cases, shewing that ex necessitate I was bound to punish an insult to the court, and advised consideration of those cases to persons interested in the matter. My intention was obviously to give you another opportunity after referring to the law to apolo- gise. I said I would give my decision on Monday, and that you had due notice. You, taking the matter as one of dry notice, said, "I have received no notice." It seemed that the Acting Registrar had told you I should give my deci- sion, but he omitted to say on Monday, as I had intended he should. The spirit in which the objection that you had not received notice was made satisfied me that you did not understand what had passed in its true bearings. Having obtained leave to address nie, you began thus, "Merely this, my Lord, I don't seek to be! aggressive." This language under the circum. stances of your being before me as charged with contempt, was a contempt, and I designate it your fifth contempt. You proceeded, "it is the bench I respect." This was said in a tone which clearly inferred and was meant to infer that it was the bench as distinguished from its occu pant that you a Queen's Counsel had such re- spect for as you professed to have. This was 2 contempt according to the highest authority of a very grave character. This was your sixth contempt. Yun then proceeded to say that you had done nothing which could be properly called an insult. You then sat down and continued to address me, sitting on, and I had to request you to stand whilst you addressed the court. You then said that was all you had to say.-- [Mr. Pollard here raised his hands to the back of his neck to fasten some part of his dress.] When you are ready Mr. Pollard I will proceed. Mr. Pollard.--My Lord the, button of my band came unfastened, and I was afraid it would fall off, and that might be another con- tempt of court. Chief Justice. I will wait until your band is right it is very proper you have it ao. I give you credit for having uniformly insisted as you did in your defence that you have said and done nothing which can properly be called au insult to the court, I have no desire to con- ceal the fact that the difficulty you have im- posed on me has very deeply pained me ever since Thursday last, and that it will continue greatly to pain me probably more than it will pain you, not because 1 am anxious as to my own personal position other than as it is sustain important to the judicial status in this colony, but because I respect your legal learning, and because our own forensic contests have left on my mind pleasant remein- brances of kindlyfeelings towards you which even present circumstances cannot change, and be. cause you have many qualities which deservedly make you popular. If in duty to my office I could have overlooked your conduct I would have done so, but to mark my sense of your conduct is in the words of Mr. Justice Holroyd, a duty which I owe to the station to which I belong. You say you have never insulted the court. Whether you are justified in distin- guishing the court and its successive occupants in that language I leave for you to consider at leisure, you have insulted me, and in insulting me you bave insulted the court. I may add that the more humble is the occupant of the bench for the tine, the less learned and competent he may be for his office, the more important is it to surround bin with those forms of respect which have been devised to support authority against those who would usurp, subvert, or destroy it. I now proceed to pronounce my decision as er necessi- tate rei, the only judge of fact and law. I pro. nounce you guilty of grave contempts, and as from equal necessity this is the only tribunal 431 EX.
2026-05-19 19:42:36 · Baseline
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1

to you or talking you down; you will do your duty and I will do mine. I meant, as you must have known, indeed, I believe I added that you would call or not call witnesses according to your duty, and that I in directing the jury would do mine in directing them to make the proper inferences from your keeping back such a wit- n1e88. what you said, added to your tone and manner, inferred that I had improperly dictated to you, and that I had improperly attempted to talk you down. This was your second con- tempt of court. Now there at least should have been an end, but acting on your all but univer- sal rule you would and did reply to me, and you said, "That is all right if we would only stick to it" in a tone and with a manner which inferred and must have been meant to infer that I would not. Now, this was your third contempt of court. By this time your manner towards me appeared to me to be violent, and your ! general bearing was such as that I felt the cause could not then proceed with any chance of jus tice. I felt that the court had been grievously insulted. I felt it to be my duty then and there either to have committed or to have imposed a fine on you, but at the same time I feared that anger might be present in my mind, and I left the bench as the least evil before me, and to avoid what from experience I had too much reason to expecta continuance of insult, After an ab.. sence which I now wish had been longer. I returned to the bench. On my return, your manner was contemptuous towards me. Not noticing that, I asked whether you would apolo. gise. Your curt notice of this was, For what, my Lord" You then went into wide generalities that if yon bad offended, no one was more willing to admit it and apologise. You then referred to my having asked you if you would produce a witness, on which I said that you had tauntingly told the court a witness was not a piece of paper, as if I did not know a witness was not a piece of paper. Mr. Pollard your eyes are opened very wide

Mr. Pollard-Open my Lord, but with cause. Chief-Justice I will put that down. There- upon you said, admitting inferentially that you bad said 80, but still in a defiant manner," Is it that you wish me to apologise for." I said yes, sad that there were other matters requiring an apology, and you proceeded to address me In 2 manner and tone as offensive as before from which I felt satisfied, your only object was to get me into a most unseemly wrangle. Not choosing to trust myself then to punish the contempt as I felt was necessary, and feeling that until you had apologised, or at least in the then state of excitement and indecorum into which the proceedings had been thrown the cause could not properly be proceeded with,

I adjourned the court as the least objectional course. You then, still persevering in your defiant tone, protested against the adjournment as being entirely without precedent. I said I should adjourn the court till Saturday (the Friday being a holiday, adding "as

we cannot

get on in the present circumstances," and you still, as if you had not caused, what happened, desired me to take a note of your objection. You then said, if I have done any wrong there are certain steps which may be taken by the court, and you requested me to take a note of your objection. By this language you anopted deliberately all you had previously said, and, so far from apologising, courted the consequences on yourself personally of your contempts. I replied there were such steps, but that I would not then take them. You proceeded, and I had peremptorily to say silence, sir. I said you would not dare to use elsewhere such language as you had used. I added the court is adjourned. Still you persisted in re- newing your unseemly language to the court, addressing me after I had requested you to be silent and after I had adjourned the court. One of your observations was, I always answer when I am attacked and not without. Your speak- ing at all was an indecorum: what you said was a contempt in imputing to the court that it had attacked you, which was the converse of what had occurred. I consider this your fourth contempt. I was thus, by what you said after the court was adjourned, driven to adjourn the case so far indefinitely, and I said I could not hear it, you being counsel, till you should have apologised. I am glad to find

that the cause out of which the above occur. rences arose has been referred to arbitration, because I feel sure that the arbitrators will decide according to the 'very right of the case, which unfortunately this court being tied by technical rules applicable to another state of society can scarcely do. On Saturday an- other case came, on in which you again appeared As counsel. I having previously directed the Acting Registrar to communicate with you my intention to give a decision unless you previously apologised. I asked if any gentle. raan had anything to say in reference to Thurs- day. You were present, looking very indignantly at me, but said nothing. I then shortly referred to and cited the leading cases, shewing that ex necessitate I was bound to punish an insult to the court, and advised consideration of those cases to persons interested in the matter. My intention was obviously to give you another opportunity after referring to the law to apolo- gise. I said I would give my decision on Monday, and that you had due notice. You, taking the matter as one of dry notice, said, "I have received no notice." It seemed that the Acting Registrar had told you I should give my deci- sion, but he omitted to say on Monday, as I had intended he should. The spirit in which the objection that you had not received notice was made satisfied me that you did not understand what had passed in its true bearings. Having obtained leave to address nie, you began thus, "Merely this, my Lord, I don't seek to be! aggressive." This language under the circum. stances of your being before me as charged with contempt, was a contempt, and I designate it your fifth contempt. You proceeded, "it is the bench I respect." This was said in a tone which clearly inferred and was meant to infer that it was the bench as distinguished from its occu pant that you a Queen's Counsel had such re- spect for as you professed to have. This was 2 contempt according to the highest authority of a very grave character. This was your sixth contempt. Yun then proceeded to say that you had done nothing which could be properly called an insult. You then sat down and continued to address me, sitting on, and I had to request you to stand whilst you addressed the court. You then said that was all you had to say.-- [Mr. Pollard here raised his hands to the back

of his neck to fasten some part of his dress.] When you are ready Mr. Pollard I will proceed.

Mr. Pollard.--My Lord the, button of my band came unfastened, and I was afraid it would fall off, and that might be another con- tempt of court.

Chief Justice. I will wait until your band is right it is very proper you have it ao. I give you credit for having uniformly insisted as you did in your defence that you have said and done nothing which can properly be called au insult to the court, I have no desire to con- ceal the fact that the difficulty you have im- posed on me has very deeply pained me ever since Thursday last, and that it will continue greatly to pain me probably more than it will pain you, not because 1 am anxious as to my own personal position other than as it is

sustain important to

the judicial status

in this colony, but because I respect your legal learning, and because our own forensic contests have left on my mind pleasant remein- brances of kindlyfeelings towards you which even present circumstances cannot change, and be. cause you have many qualities which deservedly make you popular. If in duty to my office I could have overlooked your conduct I would have done so, but to mark my sense of your conduct is in the words of Mr. Justice Holroyd, a duty which I owe to the station to which I belong. You say you have never insulted the court. Whether you are justified in distin- guishing the court and its successive occupants in that language I leave for you to consider at leisure, you have insulted me, and in insulting me you bave insulted the court. I may add that the more humble is the occupant of the bench for the tine, the less learned and competent he may be for his office, the more important is it to surround bin with those forms of respect which have been devised to support authority against those who would usurp, subvert, or destroy it. I now proceed to pronounce my decision as er necessi- tate rei, the only judge of fact and law. I pro. nounce you guilty of grave contempts, and as from equal necessity this is the only tribunal

431

EX.

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