679

[CLIFFORD ( Robert ), Hon

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:150.00 - 200.00 EUR
[CLIFFORD ( Robert ), Hon

Bidding Over

The auction is over for this lot.
The auctioneer wasn't accepting online bids for this lot.

Contact the auctioneer for information on the auction results.

Search for other lots to bid on...
Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
[CLIFFORD ( Robert ), Hon.]. Application of Barruel's Memoirs of Jaconism, to the Secret Societies of Ireland and Great Britain. By the translator of that work. London : Sold by E. Booker, 1798FIRST (ONLY) EDITION, pages xxii, 50, 8vo, neatly bound in recent cloth, gilt : a very good to nice, uncut copy.Pages 1-28 specifically relate to Ireland, the United Irishmen, etc.ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) JOHNSON ( Robert ) : - Emerson ( John Swift ). A full and faithful report of the proceedings in His Majesty's Court of Exchequer in Ireland ; in the case of the Honorable Justice Johnson, containing the arguments of counsel, and the opinions delivered from the bench, as taken from original documents : with an appendix, comprising the act of the 44th Geo. III. c. 92 ; - the writ of habeas corpus, and return thereto ; - copies of letters written by persons of high rank in the Irish administration ; - the several affidavits made in the case ; - an authentic report of the opinion delivered in the Court of King's Bench, on Mr. Justice Johnson's case, by the Hon. Mr. Justice Day ; and a postscript. The whole carefully revised and corrected by John Swift Emerson, solicitor to Mr. Justice Johnson. Dublin printed : London: Re-printed for John Stockdale, Piccadilly, 1805. Pages (4), 238, (2, adverts), 8vo, recent paper boards : a very good copy. A complex Anglo-Irish extradition case. Originally published at Dublin during the same year. COPAC locates two copies : C & O. Not found on-line in D. The pagination in this present copy agrees with that quoted in O'Higgins 3.40.a, but not with that quoted by CUL in the COPAC entry. Johnson (1745-1833), called to the Irish bar in 1776. As 'Causidicus' wrote attacks on Judge Robinson, was elected member for Hillsborough 1788,1790,1797, appointed a justice of the common please in 1801 and as 'Juverna' wrote attacks on the Irish government in 1803. Apprehended on a charge of libel under a warrant from the chief justice of England early in 1805, he resisted unsuccessfully in the three Irish courts trial in England, was tried and found guilty in the English King's Bench and was allowed to resign in 1806. (2) HATCHELL ( John P. ). A report of the arguments and judgment upon the demurrer, in the case of Henry Edmund Taffe, Esq. against the Right Hon. Wm. Downes, Lord Chief Justice of the King's-Bench, in Ireland,, in ... 1812 & 1813, in the Court of Common Pleas, Ireland. Dublin : Printed for John Cooke, 1815. FIRST EDITION, pages (2), 198, 201 - 218, complete thus in spite of pagination jump, 8vo, pleasantly bound in recent quarter cloth, with label, gilt : a very good copy. O'Higgins 3.76. Downes filled the office of chief justice for nearly nineteen years. The few specimens of his written judgments that survive and contemporary accolades indicate that he contributed a good deal to such dignity as the immediate post-union Irish bench was able to muster. This praise counted for little in the turbulent years preceding Catholic emancipation, however, and in 1812, in a deteriorating political atmosphere and in what was a remarkable twist to events, Downes himself was to be sued over the arrest of a prominent Catholic, an arrest that he had personally sanctioned under the terms of the Irish Convention Act of 1793 : Taaffe v. Downes. Taaffe's suit failed. Downes's conduct of the trial of John Magee the following year, on a charge of criminal libel, in turn incensed the government. O'Connell, Magee's defence counsel, had mounted a savage attack on Dublin Castle rule. Peel, as chief secretary, was horrified at Downes's indulgence of O'Connell, and expressed the hope to a correspondent that the chief justice would not ‘allow the court to be again insulted and made the vehicle of treason’ (Parker, 1.117). O'Connell, for his part, did not reciprocate the indulgence, variously describing Downes as a ‘scoundrel’ and a ‘plausible tool of bigotry’ (Correspondence of O'Connell, 2.152, 384)(ODNB).(3)ENGLISH PRE 1801; HISTORY; IRELAND; LAW; TRIALS; ; ; ; ; ; ;