| Andrew White Young - International law - 1858 - 460 pages
...four years, and are ineligible for the next four years. Judiciary. The judicial power is vested in such superior and inferior courts of law and equity as the legislature may establish. The judges are appointed by the legislature during good behavior. Electors. Every free white... | |
| George Ripley, Charles Anderson Dana - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1858 - 800 pages
...Carolina has 6 representatives in the popular branch of congress. — The judicial power is vested in such superior and inferior courts of law and equity as the legislature shall from time to time establish. The judiciary of the state is at present (1858) as follows: 1. The... | |
| John Proffatt, Abraham Clark Freeman - Law reports, digests, etc - 1881 - 840 pages
...language of the constitution (nrt. V., sec. 1), in which the judicial power of the state is vested in such superior and inferior courts of law and equity as the legislature shall from time to time direct and establish. Had the frumers of the constitution intended to restrict... | |
| Law reports, digests, etc - 1900 - 1234 pages
...the clause in said constitution providing that the judicial power of the state "shall be vested in such superior and inferior courts of law and equity as the legislature shall from time to time direct and establish." Article 5, § 1. If the tenure of office clause in said... | |
| Tennessee. Supreme Court, William Wilcox Cooke, Joseph Brown Heiskell, Jere Baxter, Benjamin James Lea, George Wesley Pickle, Charles Theodore Cates, Frank Marian Thompson, Charles Le Sueur Cornelius, Roy Hood Beeler - Law reports, digests, etc - 1891 - 898 pages
...wholly wanting in common law powers. By the Constitution of 1796, all judicial power was vested "in such superior and inferior Courts of law and equity as the Legislature shall, from time to time, ordain and establish;" by the Constitution of 1834, "in one Supreme Court,... | |
| Joshua William Caldwell - Constitutional history - 1895 - 222 pages
...large accessions of free negroes, and was anxious to stop the inflow. The Judicial power was vested in such superior and inferior Courts of law and equity as the Legislature might establish. Herein lay probably the gravest defect of the Constitution. The true American idea... | |
| Tennessee Bar Association - Bar associations - 1896 - 620 pages
...provisions based directly upon the North Carolina Constitution, whereby the judicial power was vested iu such Superior and Inferior Courts of Law and Equity as the Legislature should from time to time direct and establish, and it was provided that the Judges and States Attorneys... | |
| William Robertson Garrett, Albert Virgil Goodpasture - Tennessee - 1903 - 370 pages
..."Circuit" and "Chancery," which it does not contain. The Const, of 1796 vested the judicial power "in such superior and inferior courts of law and equity" as the Legislature might establish, Art. V, Sec. i.] SEC. 2. The Supreme Court shall consist of five Judges, of whom not... | |
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