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Court the power to deprive it of jurisdiction and cut
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its jurisdiction, too, substantially would be unconstitu-
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tional. I am not sure of the other way.
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MRS. BOTHE: I think the fact that influences
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the Committee is the fact we got. along for a hundred
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years without such a provision, just the provision that
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it has the jurisdiction provided by law, period.
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MR. MARTINEAU: The difficulty with the other
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aspect of it is, if you provide that they have the right
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to draft into the Legislature to have appellate juris-
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diction in all cases, then there is no way of limiting
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anyone from not having a fight to go all the way from
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People's Court right up to the Supreme Court, no natter
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what type of case it is and no matter what justifiable
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reason there may be for cutting off the appeal at any
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particular point.
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MR. SYKES: I think the draft should make clear
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you could cut the right of appeal , some rights of appeal
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off, but that the Court of Appeals should have appellate
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jurisdiction.
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MR. ENEY: That would mean, then, that the
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