| Great Britain. Court of Exchequer - 1832 - 818 páginas
...words which might admit of doubt, or to introduce matter upon which the policy was silent : but that it was at direct variance with the words of the policy, and in plain opposition to the language it used; viz. that whereas the policy imported to be upon ship, furniture, and apparel generally, the usage... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Exchequer, Charles Crompton, Sir John Jervis - 1833 - 728 páginas
...unless it had a boat in that place, and so slung. The objection, then, to the parol evidence is, that it was not to explain any ambiguous words in the policy,...policy, and in plain opposition to the language it used. That, whereas the policy imported to be upon the ship, furniture, and apparel generally, the usage... | |
| John William Smith - 1841 - 744 páginas
...doubt, or to introduce matter upon which the policy was silent, but that it was at direct variance iwith the words of the policy, and in plain opposition to the language it used, ;•/";., that whereas the policy imported to be upon ship, furniture, and apparel generally, the usage... | |
| John Duer - 1845 - 822 páginas
...unless it had a boat in that place, and so slung. The objection, then, to the parol evidence, is, that it was not to explain any ambiguous words in the policy,...policy, and in plain opposition to the language it used. That whereas the policy imported to be upon the ship, furniture, and apparel, generally, the usage... | |
| Francis Hildyard - 1845 - 894 páginas
...the parol evidence was this, that it was not to explain any ambiguous words in the policy, any word, which might admit of doubt, nor to introduce matter...policy, and in plain opposition to the language it used. That, whereas, the policy imported to be upon the ship, furniture, and apparel generally — the usage... | |
| Francis Hildyard - 1845 - 894 páginas
...where goods are usually place and so slung. The objection then to the parol evidence was this, that it was not to explain any ambiguous words in the policy, any word, which might admit of doubt, nor to introduce matter upon which the policy was silent, but was... | |
| Charles Abbott (Baron Tenterden) - 1846 - 1088 páginas
...words which might admit of doubt, or to introduce matter upon which the policy was silent, but that it was at direct variance with the words of the policy, and in plain opposition to the language it used — that whereas the policy imported to be upon ship, furniture, and apparel generally, the usage is... | |
| John William Smith, John Innes Clark Hare, Horace Binney Wallace, John William Wallace - 1855 - 1006 páginas
...words which might admit of doubt, or to introduce matter upon which the policy was silent, but that it was at direct variance with the words of the policy, and in plain opposition to the language it used, viz., that whereas, the policy imported to be upon ship, furniture, and apparel generally, the usage... | |
| Charles Abbott (Baron Tenterden) - 1856 - 996 páginas
...words which might admit of doubt, or to introduce matter upon which the policy was silent, but that it was at direct variance with the words of the policy, and in plain opposition to the language it used — that whereas the policy imported to be upon ship, furniture, and apparel * generally, the usage... | |
| Manley Hopkins - 1859 - 520 páginas
...slung on the outside of the ship upon the quarter. Says that great Judge, Lord Lyndhurst (p. 249) — " It was not to explain any ambiguous words in the policy, any words which might admit of doabt. nor to introduce matter upon which the policy was silent, bat was at direct variance with the... | |
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