Lexicographical Neighbors of Misawarded
Literary usage of Misawarded
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A New Abridgment of the Law by Matthew Bacon (1832)
"But if the place be totally misawarded, this is not helped by Vide 4 Ann.
any statute; but if it is only misawarded in part, this is helped e- 1Gl §,? ..."
2. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the English Courts of Common Law by Great Britain Bail Court (1872)
"Therefore, when such court gives judgment against defendant on a verdict upon
jury process which has been misawarded, a court of error may order it to award ..."
3. The Legal Observer, Digest, and Journal of Jurisprudence (1852)
"... it could mean in the jury process one offence only ; and therefore the process
was here misawarded, and the judgment could not be sustained. ..."
4. A New Abridgment of the Law with Large Additions and Corrections by Matthew Bacon, Henry Gwilliam, Charles Edward Dodd, John Bouvier (1846)
"But if the place be totally misawarded, this is not helped by any statute; but
if it is only misawarded in part, this is helped by the express words of 21 ..."
5. A Digest of the Laws of England by John Comyns, Anthony Hammond, Thomas Day (1824)
"13. after verdict no judgment shall be stayed, or reversed, by reason the visne
is in some part misawarded, or sued out of more or fewer places than it ..."
6. A Treatise on Crimes and Misdemeanors by William Oldnall Russell, Charles Sprengel Greaves (1877)
"... it could mean in the jury process one offence only; and therefore the process
was here misawarded, and the judgment could not be sustained. ..."
7. The Reports of the Most Learned Sir Edmund Saunders, Knt: Of Several by Great Britain Court of King's Bench, Edmund Saunders, John Williams (1845)
"13. for two of the said wards appear to be next to the place wasted, and so the
venue was misawarded only in part: Wherefore by their opinions the judgment ..."
8. Reports of Cases in Criminal Law Argued and Determined in All the Courts in by Edward William Cox (1868)
"But he said that there the jury process was misawarded, and so there was a ground
for reversing the judgment without deciding the other question. ..."