It is the glory and happiness of our excellent constitution, that to prevent any injustice no man is to be concluded by the first judgment; but that if he apprehends himself to be aggrieved, he has another Court to which he can resort for relief; for this purpose the law furnishes him with appeals, with writs of error and false judgment.


King v. Chancellor, &c, of the University of Cambridge (1720), 1 Str. Rep. 564.


It is the glory and happiness of our excellent constitution, that to prevent any injustice no man is to be concluded by the first judgment; but that...

It is the glory and happiness of our excellent constitution, that to prevent any injustice no man is to be concluded by the first judgment; but that...

It is the glory and happiness of our excellent constitution, that to prevent any injustice no man is to be concluded by the first judgment; but that...

It is the glory and happiness of our excellent constitution, that to prevent any injustice no man is to be concluded by the first judgment; but that...