. Trinity College and Trinity Hospital; a historical sketch. a simple absolvitor. But as yourLordships have arrived at a difierent conclusion generally, it is needless tospeculate upon what might have been done under a different view. The learned Counsel and Agents who represented the parties, wereas follows:— THE beneficiaries LAW PLEA. 257 For William Forrester and Others—Mr Patton and Mr A. Ruther- furd Clark. Agent—Mr James Webster, Mary Ann Reid and Others (afterwards Clephane, etc.)—MrMoir and Mr Adam Gilford. Agents—Messrs Wotherspoonand Morrison, the Lord Provost, Mag


. Trinity College and Trinity Hospital; a historical sketch. a simple absolvitor. But as yourLordships have arrived at a difierent conclusion generally, it is needless tospeculate upon what might have been done under a different view. The learned Counsel and Agents who represented the parties, wereas follows:— THE beneficiaries LAW PLEA. 257 For William Forrester and Others—Mr Patton and Mr A. Ruther- furd Clark. Agent—Mr James Webster, Mary Ann Reid and Others (afterwards Clephane, etc.)—MrMoir and Mr Adam Gilford. Agents—Messrs Wotherspoonand Morrison, the Lord Provost, Magistrates, and Town Council of Edin-burgh—Mr George Young and Mr A. B. Shand. Agent—Mr Patrick Graham, Ivory, though he stood alone, had taken a firmer andmore judicious grip of the question than his learned colleagues onthe Bench. He had viewed the matter not from a parochial, aswell as judicial, point of view, but from the broad and catholic basisas to what was best to be done in the circumstances for the charityof Trinity 2k CHAPTER XX. AN APPEAL TO THE HOUSE OF LORDS.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidtrinitycolle, bookyear1896