Generate a structured brief — facts, issues, held, reasoning, and significance — for this case in seconds. Or browse the verbatim judgment via the source links below.
Subject_1 Burgh Subject_2 Trade Incorporation Subject_3 Entrance Fees Subject_4 Burgh Trading Act 1846 (9 and 10 Vict. cap. 7), sec. 3. Facts: An ancient trade incorporation whose exclusive trading privileges had been taken away by the Burgh Trading Act 1846, had obtained in 1850, approved by the Court, a set of bye-laws sanctioning certain rates of entry for relatives of members, “entrants at the near Page: 913 ↓
(See Incorporation of Cordiners of Edinburgh, Petitioners , March 9, 1907, 44 S.L.R. 495 .)
On 26th February 1910 the Incorporation of Cordiners of the City of Edinburgh, and Charles Wilfred Allan, deacon, and Joseph Park, treasurer thereof, as representing the Incorporation, presented a petition under the Burgh Trading Act 1846 (9 and 10 Vict. cap. 17), sec. 3, for the sanction of alterations in the bye-laws.
The facts as to the presentation of a former petition by the Incorporation appear from the former report (44 S.L.R. 495).
Not exceeding 21 years of age, — from £3110/-to £115 10/- Exceeding 21, additional for
Auto-extracted from BAILII. Full structured brief in progress — the source links below give you the verbatim judgment in the meantime.
Multiple official and mirror sources — pick whichever loads cleanly on your network.
Common Room
0 comments · About the Common Room →
No comments yet — start the discussion.
Voted-best comments help future students and feed Caselaw's AI study tools.