If the law be thought to be improper or inconvenient, application to correct it must be made elsewhere, and not to those who are bound by the repeated and solemn judgments of their predecessors.


Bishop of London v. Ffytche (1800), 1 East, 495.


If the law be thought to be improper or inconvenient, application to correct it must be made elsewhere, and not to those who are bound by the...

If the law be thought to be improper or inconvenient, application to correct it must be made elsewhere, and not to those who are bound by the...

If the law be thought to be improper or inconvenient, application to correct it must be made elsewhere, and not to those who are bound by the...

If the law be thought to be improper or inconvenient, application to correct it must be made elsewhere, and not to those who are bound by the...