For the moment, SOQUIJ has the support of the Bar of Quebec, the magistrature, the Chamber of notaries, and also from MALL. ❋ Unknown (2005)
And do not they then that stand so well affected towards applause and fame themselves own they cast away very extraordinary pleasures, when they decline, magistrature, public offices, and the favor and confidences of princes, from whom ❋ Unknown (2004)
Wednesday, taking tight control of almost all institutions in the former Zaire, apart from the magistrature, left "independent". ❋ Unknown (1997)
The retired registrar, the pensioned usher aspiring late in life to some petty magistrature, are powerless to touch his heart. ❋ Various (N/A)
Gringoire went onwe know that he had no great love for the magistrature, owing, may-be, to the grudge he bore against the Palais de Justice ever since his dramatic misadventure. ❋ Unknown (1917)
Until 1818 they had owned all but seventeen houses of the inner town; they had their own magistrature. ❋ Henry Baerlein (1917)
The magistrature is an institution of prime importance for us. ❋ Herman Bernstein (1905)
Certainly it exposes the abuses of the French magistrature, but at what cost of fundamental truth! ❋ Arnold Bennett (1899)
The "Substitut" always preserved a rather deferential attitude before the President and M. Ducros, for they belonged to the magistrature assise, whilst he merely formed part of the magistrature debout The French word magistrat is not the equivalent of our magistrate, the French term for which is "Juge de Paix." ❋ Frederick Spencer Hamilton (1892)
He afterwards became assistant district attorney and later, when a vacancy occurred in the city magistrature, he was successful in securing the appointment. ❋ Charles Klein (1891)
If frogs were not excluded from the magistrature of their country (and I cannot but think it a little hard that they are), one should not wonder at this choice. ❋ Beckford, William (1891)
Et les deux frères s'en furent au théâtre, et plus tard aux plus hautes dignités de la magistrature. ❋ George William Erskine Russell (1886)
The magistrature and the powers that be, seem to have been somewhat disturbed by certain consequences of this highly democratic institution. ❋ ��mile Faguet (1881)
It was that which ensured the obedience of the enlightened and conscientious men who had great influence over the army and the magistrature. ❋ Sutherland Menzies (1861)
Today, it is merely a collection of ordinary individuals and subjects, even less than that -- an administrative staff similar to that of the university, of the magistrature, of the treasury, and of the woods and forests, even more closely watched and bridled, with more detailed precautions and stricter interdictions. ❋ Hippolyte Taine (1860)
"In every true democracy the magistrature is not an advantage but an onerous burden, not to be assigned to one more than to another." ❋ Hippolyte Taine (1860)
The germ of a hateful burgher-oligarchy was in the system, but, as compared with Spain, where municipal magistracies were sold by the crown at public auction; or with France, where every office in church, law, magistrature, or court was an object of merchandise disposed of in open market, the system was purity itself, and marked a great advance in the science of government. ❋ John Lothrop Motley (1845)