A Judge cannot set himself above the law which he has to administer, or make or mould it to suit the exigencies of a particular occasion. - Sir Alexander Cockburn, 12th Baronet

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A Judge cannot set himself above the law which he has to administer, or make or mould it to suit the exigencies of a particular occasion.

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About Sir Alexander Cockburn, 12th Baronet

Sir Alexander Cockburn, 12th Baronet, QC (24 September 1802 – 20 November 1880) was a Scottish lawyer, politician and judge. A notorious womaniser and socialite, as Lord Chief Justice he heard some of the leading causes célèbres of the nineteenth century.

Also Known As

Native Name: Alexander Cockburn, 12. Baronet
Alternative Names: Alexander Cockburn Sir Alexander James Edmund Cockburn, of Langton, 12th Bt.
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Additional quotes by Sir Alexander Cockburn, 12th Baronet

I readily admit that the law which requires presumption or custom to be carried back for a period of nearly 700 years, is a bad and mischievous law, and one which is discreditable to us as a civilised and enlightened people, but such is the law; and while it so continues, I consider myself, in administering it, as bound to administer it as I find it; nor do I feel myself warranted in undermining or frittering it away by subtle fictions or artificial presumptions inconsistent with truth and fact.

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Whatever disadvantages attach to a system of unwritten law, and of these we are fully sensible, it has at least this advantage, that its elasticity enables those who administer it to adapt it to the varying conditions of society, and to the requirements and habits of the age in which we live, so as to avoid the inconsistencies and injustice which arise when the law is no longer in harmony with the wants and usages and interests of the generation to which it is immediately applied.

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