On this page
-
Text (4)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
80 T H E Ii E A DEB . [ No . 4509 , January 23 , 1858 ^
Untitled Article
GATHERINGS FROM THE LAW AND POLICE COURTS . A cask concerning the conduct of a solicitor was brought last Saturday before the attention of tho Court of Chancery . The solicitor in question , Mr . Daniel Keano , had written an offensive letter to one of tho Masters of the court , who handed tho letter to tho Lord Chancellor , and an application was made to hia Lordship to take uuoa a course as scorned necessary under tho
clroum-: stances . The Lord Chancellor , in delivering judgment , ( gave a severe reprimand to the . solicitor , who was ordered to be present , and declared that the letter was most improper , and such as never should have been written . The solicitor , however , had put in an apologetic affidavit , and on that account he would not visit him with the censure of the court further than to compel him to pay all the costs of the application . Mr . Justice Byles , the new Judge of the Court of Common Pleas , took the oaths last Saturday , in the Court of Queen ' s Bench , and was congratulated by Lord Campbell on his elevation . This was followed by the introduction to the court of Dr . Adams , Dr . Phillimore , Dr . Deane , and Dr . Twiss , the new Queen's Counsel . These gentlemen were complimented by Lord Campbell on the accession of learning and talent which they bring to th « common law bar . Sir Cresswell Cresswell , the Judge Ordinary of the new Court of Divorce , took his seat for the first time last Saturday morning . Doctors Adams , Phillimore , Deane , and Twiss , were called to the inner bar as Queen ' s counsel . The first case was then called on , when Dr . Phillimore appeared in a suit for divorce , promoted by Ann Dean , against Arthur Dean , by reason of adultery . The suit was instituted by letters of request from the diocese of Oxford , in last Michaelmas term ; and the Dean of Arches had pronounced the husband in contempt , but efforts to serve the decree had not been successful . The decree was via et modus , or by ways and means . The present proceedings were merely preliminary , and the case was adjourned for a week . Mr . Beadon , the Marlborough-street magistrate , gave judgment on Monday in a question arising out of a charge against a pawnbroker of receiving , and advancing money upon , a Crimean medal belonging to a man who was recently in the 44 th Foot , and is now in the militia . The medal had been pawned while the man was totally unconnected either with the regular army or the militia ; and the question was , whether , being a civilian at the time , he had not a right to dispose of the distinction . Mr . Beadon decided that he had not . It was evidently intended , he observed , that the medals should be handed down from generation to generation as a species of heirlooms ; and the Legislature therefore prohibited their being disposed of . The War Office , however , would not press for a conviction in this particular case , provided the medal were given up . Captain Thomas Denkin , of the ship Hibernia , was on Monday summoned at the Mansion House on a charge of attempting to defraud the Maritime Passengers Insurance Company of 1101 . Previous to starting for Quebec , he had insured a quantity of wearing apparel and nautical instruments . During the voyage , the ship was waterlogged and abandoned by the crew , who were afterwards picked up by the Hermann , of Bremen . The captain ' s things were saved , though they were somewhat damaged by salt water . He afterwards distributed them among the crew , saying he did not care for them , as he was insured ; and , on coming back to England , he made the demand of 110 / . on the company . The charge was . supported by the evidence of the sailors ; but it appeared that they had some pique against Captain Denkin , and the Lord Mayor dismissed the case . In the Court of Bankruptcy on Tuesday , Colonel William Petrie Waugh again failed to surrender to pass his examination , and was proclaimed as an outlaw . The choice of assignees was perfected in the case of Messrs . Jonathan and Robert Hills , bankers , of Dartford and Gravesend . The claims of unsecured creditors amount to about 25 , 000 / ., and nearly the whole of the property of the bank is held by the Commercial Bank of London as security for advances of about equivalent value . The case of Samuel J . Haynes came before Mr . Commissioner Murphy in the Insolvent Debtors' Court on Tuesday . He was a linendraper at Bow , and is now in custody at the suit of Messrs . Keats and Mechi , the late sheriffs , for 140 / . law costs entailed upon them by an unsuccessful action brought by the insolvent . There appears to have been an attempt on the part of Haynes to defraud the sheriffs , and the Commissioner felt so strongly that the insolvent had perjured himself , that he announced his intention of submitting the facts to tho Attorney-General , in order to ascertain whether any other steps could be taken . He refused to sanction the discharge of Haynes from tho suit of the sheriffs till the lapse of eighteon months from the vesting order . Applications under tho Divorce Act have been made during the week at the police-offices for protection to tho property of married women abandoned by , or sepurated from , their husbands . At tho Lambeth office , « n order was granted in the case of Mrs . Freeman ; and the consideration of a case at Clorkenwcll was postponed , in order that tho wife might bring witnesses as to tho de-_ sor . tion , pf r 4 ior . byJierJmaban . d , XJifiJlSljaRRllcftiign "JL Leeds under tho provisions of the act came boforoTho borough magistrates on Tuesday , when a respectablelooking woman appeared for tho protection of her property . She stilted that , on tho ICth of February , 1880 , she was married to George Wilcock , who deserted her without just cause on the 18 th of March , 1848 , since which time they had boon separated . During tho aoparation she hud acquired property by her own earnings , consisting of eleven houses , furniture , money , &o ., und she applied to tho Court for its protection from her
hus--MVta band and his creditors . The husband was not present , and the order w as made . Mr . Cronin , a medical gentleman , has obtained ( by an action in the Court of Queen's Bench ) 250 / . damages from Lord Powerscburt , on account of injuries received by him owing to the careless driving of the defendant , which caused a collision between his Lordship ' s carria ge and that of Mr . Cronin .
Untitled Article
OBITUARY . The Right Hon . Sir William Henky Maule . —This acute lawyer and eminent Judge died last Saturday morning , in the seventy-third year of his age , afte r an attack of bronchitis which only commenced on tho previous Monday . He was a fellow of Trinity College , Cambridge ; led the Oxford circuit for many years ; was M . P . for Carlow from 1837 to 1839 ; was subsequentl y appointed a Justice of the Court of Common Pleas , which position he resigned in 1856 ; and was made a Privy Councillor in 1855 . In politics , he was a Liberal . The Duke of Devonshire died suddenly , at an early hour en Monday morning , of paralysis , in the sixty-eighth year of his age . About five years ago , he had an attack of the same nature , from which , however , he recovered sufficiently to return to all the active pursuits of life . He was recently entertaining large parties at Bolton Abbey for grouse shooting , and had for some time enjoyed such good health that he did not pay his usual autumnal visit to Brighton . In politics , he was a Whig , but he never spoke in the House of Lords . He was sent on a special embassy to Russia in May , 1826 , as Ambassador Extraordinary at the coronation of the late Emperor Nicholas , and astonished the Russians by the superb character of his retinue . It is said that he spent more than 50 , 000 / . beyond the allowance made by Government . Nicholas conferred on him two Russian orders of knighthood , and on returning to England he was made a Knight of the Garter . He has twice served as Lord Chamberlain of the Household . He was never married , and is succeeded in the title and estates by his kinsman , the Earl of Burlington . Hia fondness for horticultural pursuits , and his great benevolence to hia tenantry ( who derived great advantages from hia truly paternal regard for them ) , gave Leigh Hunt occasion to observe , with equal pertinence and beauty , in one of his dedications , that the late Duke was " one of whom it may be « aid , without poetical exaggeration , and even without metaphor , that his footsteps may be traced in flowers , and that he has made the houses of the poor to smile . " Mrs . Nisbett . —Lady Boothby , better known to playgoers as Mrs . Nisbett , died last Saturday at her residence , Rose Mount , St . Leonard's , of an illness brought on by domestic griefs . She was a Londoner by birth , and V ^ s th e eldest daughter of Lieutenant Frederick Hayes Macnamara , of the 52 nd Regiment . When only thirteen years old , she was obliged by family misfortunes to take to the stage ; and , when scarcely nineteen , she married Captain John Alexander Nisbett , of the Life Guards , who shortly afterwards lost his life in trying a horse not thoroughly broken in . His widow then returned to the stage , and acquired a brilliant reputation in light comedy . Again marrying—this time Sir William Boothby , Bart . —she was again speedily left a widow , and once more went back to the stage , from which , however , ill-health shortly compelled her to retire . There was recently some talk of another reappearance ; but death has interposed to prevent any such pleasure to the frequenter of the theatres . The almost sudden deaths of her mother , brother , and sister , to whom she was tenderly attached , gave auch a shock to her system that she expired after an illness of only two days . She was in the forty-sixth year of her age . Her acting was especially distinguished by tho quahty of joyousness—of hearty , impulsive hilarity and buoyant ease ; and this gave to it a fascination which dwellfl to the memory like sunshine . She did not possess any power over pathos ; but her comedy w « . s charming . AnciiDBACON Vknaples died a few days ago , in Wa eighty-fourth year . Tho Archdeaconry of Carmarthen , and the vicarago of Nantmel , Radnorshire , are thus left vacant . . Viob Admiral Sir John Coode . —An offlicer w&o distinguished himself during tho last war with France and at the bombardment of Algiers in 181 ( 5 , died on Tuesday evening at his residence , St . Androw ' a-terrace , Plymouth , in tho seventy-ninth year of his ago .
Untitled Article
MISCELLANEOUS . The Court , —The Duke of Saxo-Coburg Gotha arrived at Buckingham Palace on tho night of Friday wcok . The Princess of Prussia arrived on the following : """ Tib ^ n 7 On ~ Mondayrthe-anivals-were-l ' rinoo-Alb 0 KL 9 i _ , Prussia , Prince William of Baden , tho King or tno Belgians , tho Duko of Brabant , and tho If ™ 1 ll Flanders . Tho Prince of Prussia reached Buoklngnani Palace on Tuesday . Tho Queen and her guests , on Tuesday evening , vlaitod Ilor Majoaty'a Thoatro , ana saw Macbeth performed by tho apodal company , v Wednesday evening , a State Bull was given , at HuoKingham Palace , to which 1100 persons woro 1 " ™ ° "' Among tho more distinguished company was tho J » auft-
Untitled Article
of a quarrel , near Ratcliff Highway , about some loose women . Murder at Over Darwen . —A young man named Thomas Kershaw has been apprehended at the village of Over Darwen on the charge of murdering his father , Robert Kershaw , who lived with his family at the same place . The murdered man had formerly been a farmer , but , from reduced circumstances , was compelled to seek employment at the mills at Over Darwen , where he and all his children had worked together for some time past . One day , his son Thomas absented himself from work , saying that he was going to Blackburn ; but the rest of the family went to the mills as usual and found both their parents at home when they came in to dinner . When , however , they finally returned home from work in the evening , their father was absent , and they inquired of their mother where he was . She told them he was out , but she did not know where he was gone to . About nine o ' clock , the whole family retired to bed , and had not been there very long , when the eldest son Thomas told one of his brothers " who slept with him , that he found his father lying dead on the floor when he came home from his work , and , on seeing this , he dragged his body down stairs into the coal cellar , and buried it under the coals . At the same time he enjoined his brother to keep the affair strictly secret ; but the latter immediately got up and mentioned the circumstance to his uncle , who lived close by . The police were then communicated with , when several constables went to the house of the murdered man , and , having descended to the cellar , and dug away nearly half a ton of coals , they discovered the body of Robert Kershaw . He was quite dead , and it appeared evident that death had been caused by a heavy blow on the forehead ; but the throat and face were horribly mangled . The son Thomas was at once taken into custody , and his mother , who related to the police a few circumstances in connexion with the murder of her husband , but who appeared to be in some measure an imbecile , was likewise apprehended on suspicion of being concerned in the affair . The coroner ' s inquest on the body has terminated in a verdict of Wilful Murder against Thomas Kershaw , the son . Mrs . Kershaw has been discharged . Burglary . —The house of Mr . Joseph Clarkson , an old gentleman of considerable wealth , residing in a very lonely spot about five miles from Barnsley , was entered by a gang of masked burglars early on Wednesday morning . Mr . Clarkson was a good deal ill-treated , and his daughter-in-law was threatened ; but the ruffians were attacked by a servant-man with a gun , and put to flight , carrying with them only a very small amount of booty . - Irish Ruffianism . —Two Irishmen are under remand , one at Guildhall , the other at the Thames policeoffice , on charges of fracturing the skulls of men with whom they had picked quarrels . In both cases it appears highly probable that the wounded men will die . Murder at Wadsworth . —The body of Bethel Parkinson , a cattle dealer and stone delver , has been found in a field on Wadsworth Moors , Yorkshire , frightfully mutilated . . The man was probably returning from a cattle fair or market , and appears to have been murdered for the sake of a large sum of money which he had about him , and which was not found on the body . A young man , named Shepherd , is in custody - under suspicion . Embezzlement . —Isaac Brouwer , an agent recently employed by Messrs . Poole and Co ., cattle salesmen , appeared on Wednesday in discharge of bail at Guildhall , to answer a charge of embezzling various sums of money , amounting- to upwards of 2000 / ., the property of his employers . He was committed for trial ; but bail was accepted . Garotte Robbery at Manchester . — -About halfpast six o ' clock on Tuesday evening , Mr . David Ritman , jeweller , while on his way home from his shop in Stork-street , Cheetham , Manchester , was attacked by three , men and robbed . One of the men put his arm round Mr . Ritman ' s neck and garotted him , while the two others deprived him of a leathern case containing twenty-three silver watches , twelve gold watches , twenty * fonr gold guard chains , and . three 10 / . Bank of England notes—in all , about 400 / . worth of property . They then made their escape , leaving their victim in a state of insensibility . The Keiqhley Poisoning Case . —John Sagar has been committed for trial on the charge , already described , of poisoning his wife with arsenic . Murder ov a Daughter . —The girl Bennet , who has been in the Camberwell workhouse for some time , owing to injuries inflicted on her by her drunken mother , died on Wednesday evening . ' ¦ ¦ " ' ¦ ¦ - ""¦ ' ¦— —i—i———. ,. .,.. .
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 23, 1858, page 80, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2227/page/8/
-