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Definition of Stipendiary magistrate
1. Noun. (United Kingdom) a paid magistrate (appointed by the Home Secretary) dealing with police cases.
Geographical relationships: Britain, Great Britain, U.k., Uk, United Kingdom, United Kingdom Of Great Britain And Northern Ireland
Generic synonyms: Magistrate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stipendiary Magistrate
Literary usage of Stipendiary magistrate
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Canadian Law Timesby Armour, Edward Douglas, 1851-1922, Judicial Committee, Great Britain, Elliott, Charles, Privy Council, Gillis, Edward, Hunter, Alfred Taylour, 1867-1957, Thompson, Bram by Armour, Edward Douglas, 1851-1922, Judicial Committee, Great Britain, Elliott, Charles, Privy Council, Gillis, Edward, Hunter, Alfred Taylour, 1867-1957, Thompson, Bram (1907)
"Held, that there was sufficient proof of C. having been duly commissioned to act
as stipendiary magistrate for the county of W., and that under the above ..."
2. Annual Report by Correctional Association of New York (1870)
"COKE FOWLER, stipendiary magistrate, and a Visiting Justice of the Prisons of
Swansea and Cardiff". 10. FROM SIR JOHN BOWRING, CORRESPONDING MEMBER OF THE ..."
3. The Statutes of Nova Scotia by Nova Scotia (1903)
"stipendiary magistrate. 316. There shall be a stipendiary magistrate for the city
stipendiary of Sydney, who shall be appointed by the Governor-in-Sure and ..."
4. The Parliamentary Debates: Official Report by Northern Ireland Parliament. House of Commons (1898)
"In Auckland last month there were four constables who came in for merited
castigation from the stipendiary magistrate, because they entered into a ..."
5. A Treatise on the Law Relating to Municipal Corporations in England and Wales by Thomas James Arnold, Samuel George Johnson (1883)
"Appointment of stipendiary magistrate. (2.) No room in a house licensed for ...
If the council desire the appointment of a stipendiary magistrate (a) for ..."
6. The Foundation of Death: A Study of the Drink-question by Axel Carl Johan Gustafson (1884)
"In 1878 the stipendiary magistrate of Liverpool said— " The moving cause of crimes
of violence and disorder in our midst is drunkenness. ..."
7. Historical and Philosophical Essays by Nassau William Senior (1865)
"... only four witnesses connected with that country having been examined, Mr.
Foster, the stipendiary magistrate of Manchester, and Doherty, M'Williams, ..."
8. Historical and Philosophical Essays by Nassau William Senior (1865)
"... only four witnesses connected with that country having been examined, Mr.
Foster, the stipendiary magistrate of Manchester, and Doherty, M'Williams, ..."