remedy that existed under the law for the redress of any wrongful action in connection with a public trust of a charitable or religious nature
defend one's own trade, then no wrong is committed and no action will lie, although damage to another ensues. Of malice the Lord ... plaintiff's goods infringed their trade-mark rights was an actionable wrong.
51. There remain eight allegations of slander of goods
than one person is concerned in the commission of a wrong the person wronged has his remedy against all or any of them ... action, however, is entirely distinct from an action in ejectment. At common law there were only two kinds of redress from actionable wrong
wrong order, but so too was the sale a wrong sale, and the delivery warrant based upon it wrong also. It is not therefore correct ... property, and to include in his suit every relief which the wrongful action of the Court gives rise to. If he has lost possession
being applicable to actions for damages against wrong doers. In such actions joint wrong doers may be sued jointly or severally.
5. In Pollock ... than one person is concerned in the commission of a wrong, the person wronged has his remedy against all or any one or more
Provinces, and a material interference with such a right is an actionable wrong and affords a good cause of action to the person or persons
wrongfully imprisoning and taking my son-in-law.
3. The three petitions, one after the other, illustrated the attitude of the defendant. His action ... Magistrate on 9th February 1922, it could in law constitute an actionable wrong. But what was strenuously argued was that the statements made
family as a whole.
9. The lower Courts were, therefore, clearly wrong in holding that the act of the 1st plaintiff as manager was binding ... January, 1915. If, therefore, the lower Courts were wrong in dismissing the plaintiffs' action altogether, the next question for consideration is in respect
reason that otherwise official action would be beset by private prosecution. Judges would be charged with defamation, policemen with wrongful restraint, and distrainers with theft ... That, as I have shown above, is quite wrong; and acting here refers to the specific action which comprises the offence. The section might
decree on that alternative cause of action, it being unnecessary for such a cause of action to prove want of reasonable and probable cause ... before us is whether apart from the "action on the case" a separate action for trespass will lie. On first impression one would