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never gave you plans for any body else's furniture? _A._ Never. _Q._ You never employed a draftsman of his class to give you plans? _A._ No, I made up two pieces of furniture from his plans, to go into a library; that was the first thing. _Q._ He came as a friend of Mr. Cochrane Johnstone's? _A._ Yes, to look to the furniture. _Q._ And then, out of friendship to you, knowing you had little alteration to make, he proposed to assist you? _A._ Yes; I first proposed the business, and Mr. De Berenger approved of it. _Q._ He was going to make a survey of the inside of your house that morning; was he not? _A._ He did of that also. _Q._ Particularly your lodgers bed-room; he was very anxious to see that? _A._ And all my own. _Q._ He was very anxious to see your lodgers bed-room? _A._ Not that particularly. _Q._ You went and knocked up Mr. Tragear? _A._ Yes; I went up and desired them to rise, and to clear up their room, for that he was coming there. _Q._ Did you desire them to rise yourself? _A._ Yes, there is not a doubt of it, for I went up stairs. _Lord Ellenborough._ Will you take upon you, upon your oath, to say, that you went into that bed-room out of which they had come? _A._ Yes, twice over. _Mr. Adolphus._ What is your christian name? _A._ Isaac Donithorne. _Q._ Do you know any thing about the Stock Exchange? _A._ A little; something about it. _Q._ Have you ever done business there? _A._ Never in my life. _Q._ Have you ever employed an attorney? _A._ Yes. _Q._ Who is your attorney? _A._ That gentleman there. _Q._ What is his name? _A._ Mr. Tahourdin. _Q._ In what particular business is Mr. Tahourdin your attorney? _A._ By the desire of the honourable Cochrane Johnstone, who thinks himself very ill used by a set of villains.---- _Q._ After all that preamble, as to Mr. Cochrane Johnstone's being ill used by a set of villains, will you answer my question, what Mr. Tahourdin is doing for you? _A._ Issuing some writs. _Q._ What have you desired him to do? _A._ To issue some writs. _Q._ How many? _A._ A hundred and thirty-five. _Lord Ellenborough._ A hundred and thirty-five writs, of what kind? _Mr. Park._ Qui tam actions, and that was the reason I did not propose calling him. _Mr. Adolphus._ Are you to pay Mr. Tahourdin the costs of those actions, or Mr. Cochrane Johnstone? _A._ Mr. Cochrane Johnstone most undoubtedly, I
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