All arguments on the hardship of a case, either on one side or the other, must be rejected, when we are pronouncing what the law is; for such arguments are only quicksands in the law, and, if indulged, will soon swallow up every principle of it.


Yates v. Hall, (1785), 1 T. R. 80.


All arguments on the hardship of a case, either on one side or the other, must be rejected, when we are pronouncing what the law is; for such...

All arguments on the hardship of a case, either on one side or the other, must be rejected, when we are pronouncing what the law is; for such...

All arguments on the hardship of a case, either on one side or the other, must be rejected, when we are pronouncing what the law is; for such...

All arguments on the hardship of a case, either on one side or the other, must be rejected, when we are pronouncing what the law is; for such...