Observe, moreover, that judges and juries are bound to kill under penalty of death (Ibid.
Bô, Prieur de la Marne, and Lebon, send judges and juriesto prison that do not always vote death.
All the judges and juries and witnesses in the world could not convince her of Albert's guilt.
There's some popular feeling against you, and juries go as the newspapers do.
By the existing constitution the superior court still has jurisdiction; and for total dissolution of wedlock the concurrent verdicts of two juries at different terms of the court are essential to a decree.
But if he comes we'll have some fun, Du dah, To see him and his juries run, Du dah!
The bill did not pass the Senate, a leading argument against it being the assumed impossibility of convicting polygamists under it with any juries drawn in Utah.
The same appears from the “reasonable prices” which Charles I, in 1663, had established by swornjuries viz.
All debts had to be paid within two years, or to be held invalid, and juries were dispensed with in such cases.
When making up juries they selected only persons of the same manner of thinking as that of the marshals and judges themselves.
Some of his charges to grandjuries were nothing but denunciations of Republican principles.
The grand juries of every county in Georgia, except two, formally presented as a grievance the passage of the land sale act of 1795.
They were supposed to selectjuries according to the laws of the States where the courts were held.
Briefly and modestly he told of his conduct before the courts and grand juries in Kentucky and Mississippi, and the result of those investigations.
In many States the United States Marshals selected what persons they pleased as members of the grandjuries and trial juries.
So it was that the juries were nothing more than machines that registered the will, opinion, or even inclination of the National judges and the United States District Attorneys.
Grand and petit juries were to be summoned by the sheriffs instead of being chosen in town meetings.
When arrests were made convictions proved difficult, for the juries were in sympathy with the law-breakers.
Juries were constantly intimidated, and their privileges were abridged.
The courts of justice were virtually silenced, since juries disregarded the charges of the judges.
I do not claim that its officers can try persons for offenses without juries in States where the civil tribunals have not been interrupted by the rebellion.
In my opinion it is wise to guard against such conflict by leaving to the courts and juries the protection of all civil rights and the redress of all civil grievances.
Judge Patterson held a few terms of court in counties when he could organize grand juries of Union men, and did something toward preserving peace and order in the community.
Here, too, in the large hall, the juries from the Central Criminal Court were lodged during the night when important cases lasted more than one day.
He holds Courts of Conservancy whenever he sees it necessary, and summons juries in Kent, from London and Middlesex, who are compelled to go on the river in boats to view and make presentments.
The history of the world will show that some of the grandest advances made in law have been made by juries who would not allow their consciences to be trampled into the earth by tyrannical judges.
So loud, indeed, was the cry that justice had been thwarted that juries were doubtless influenced by it.
The questions which were submitted to these juries show both the object of the survey and its thorough character.
Each county elected a jury of twelve men, who knew the laws, and these juries coming together in the presence of the king declared on oath what were the legal customs of the land.
Juries were to be chosen to inquire into grievances, and some of the foreign troops were sent home.
It has no historic connexion with the growth of that system, and cannot possibly indicate more than that the idea of uniting local juries in one place had occurred to some one.
Where a majority are against it, juries will violate their oath, and witnesses will get around the truth, and the result is demoralization.
The disputed land-titles got into the law courts, where judges and juries were fixed; but no matter which way the decisions went, the people kept their own.
Juries were packed, and Dudley, to avoid all mistakes, told them what verdicts to render.
In the middle of the second week in May, the grand juries had completed their work.
The charges against Anne Boleyn were presented by two grand juries before the highest judicial tribunal in the realm.
The offences in question having been committed in Middlesex and in Kent, bills were first to be returned by the grand juries of both counties.
The witnesses were not brought into court and confronted with the prisoner: their depositions were taken on oath before the grand juries and the privy council, and on the trial were read out for the accused to answer as they could.
It may be thought that the evidence was pieced together in the secrets of the cabinet; that the juries found their bills on a case presented to them by the council.
With the keenest of sleuths in our detective departments of the North, and with courts and juries of unimpeachable integrity, crime stalks boldly in its greatest cities, and arrogant corruption goes unwhipt of justice.
It has been my experience in my State in the trial of criminal cases that in nine cases out of ten, the white juries are in sympathy with the poor, ignorant Negro.
None the less such stories are accepted even by juries and judges.
All the observations of science, and most of the facts brought beforejuries in courts of law, as well as the multitude of lesser and greater facts which we accept in everyday life, get their authority from this principle.
Among the commonest and most important varieties of arguments of fact are those made before juries in courts of law.
The jury system has had a curious and interesting history: and judges have built up hedges around juries which seem to the layman merely technical, and unnecessary for the ends of justice.
Juries have now-a-days a great leaning to the side of mercy: they hang very few men comparatively, but it is always the wrong men.
He forgot that juries sometimes inquire into motives too, and might have asked whether the insult Mr. Roberts offered was not the telling of too dangerous a truth.
They see lawyers flock in and juries assemble, witnesses moving about in troops, and a rich crop of blue bags growing up.
Coroner's juries sat, and returned a verdict as much opposed to common sense as usual.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "juries" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.