The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 11 of 55 - 1599-1602 by Unknown
page 37 of 293 (12%)
page 37 of 293 (12%)
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therefore, in order that the aforesaid be exactly executed, they
ordained and decreed that the attorneys of this royal Audiencia shall conclude the said interlocutory decisions in trial and review, at one demand from each party, without giving or presenting more demands, with the warning that any others presented shall not be admitted. The clerk of court is warned in the present that he shall not receive them under penalty of a fine of two pesos, to be employed as it shall seem proper, and delivered into the charge of the collector of fines of this royal Audiencia, upon whom the execution of the above shall be most carefully charged. And they ordered it to be proclaimed, and especially to the said attorneys. So they provided, ordered, and decreed. Before me: _Pedro Hurtado Desquibel_ _An act providing that no proceedings shall be conducted in suits between Indians, without a decree from this royal Audiencia._ On the twenty-first of January, one thousand five hundred and ninety-nine, the president and auditors of the royal Audiencia of the Philipinas Islands, declared that, whereas, in one of his royal ordinances, the king, our sovereign, commands the aforesaid president and auditors that, in suits and civil and criminal cases between Indians, the usual proceedings shall not be conducted or issued, except in cases decreed and ordered by an act of this royal |
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