126 Dart's Treatise on the Law and Practice relating to Smith's Mercantile Law.-A Compendium of Mercantile Law. By JOHN WILLIAM SMITH, late of the Inner Temple, Esq., Barrister- England. By HERBERT BROOM, LL.D., of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-Law; ** This Work is mainly founded upon Blackstone, the chief aim having been to produce such a By Addison on the Law of Contracts.-Sixth Edition. "At present this is by far the best book upon the Law of Contract possessed by the Profession, appeared, carefully edited by Mr. CAVE, suffices, of itself, to secure for it a place in every law Addison on Wrongs and their Remedies; being a Treatise on the Law of Torts. Third Edition. By F. S. P. WOLFERSTAN, Esq., Barrister. Roscoe's Digest of the Law of Evidence on the Trial of Smith's Real and Personal Property. A Compendium of the Law of Real and Personal Property Primarily Connected with Conveyancing: Morgan's Statutes, General Orders, and Regulations Re lating to the Practice, Pleading, and Jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery; with Roscoe's Digest of the Law of Evidence in Criminal Cases. Seventh Edition. By JAMES FITZJAMES STEPHEN, Esq., one of Her Tilsley's Stamp Laws.-A Treatise on the Stamp Laws, being an Analytical Digest of all the Statutes and Cases relating to Stamp Duties, 1 NOTES ΤΟ SAUNDERS' REPORTS, C BY THE LATE SERJEANT WILLIAMS. Continued to the Present Time BY THE RIGHT HON. SIR EDWARD VAUGHAN WILLIAMS. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. I. LONDON: STEVENS & SONS, 119, CHANCERY LANE; W. MAXWELL & SON, 29, FLEET STREET. 1871. ADVERTISEMENT. THIS Work includes the joint notes of Sir John Patteson and Sir Edward Vaughan Williams to the Fifth Edition of "Saunders' Reports;" and the notes of Sir E. Vaughan Williams to the Sixth Edition. The notes of Serjeant Williams are referred to by figures, and all the other notes by italic letters. The new matter introduced into the above-mentioned notes of Sir E. V. Williams, and likewise into this work, will be found enclosed by brackets. The old text of "Saunders' Reports" contains so large an extent of useless matter, that it has been deemed expedient to omit it, and to substitute for it an abridgment of the several cases, to which the old notes may readily be applied. The pleadings to be found in "Saunders' Reports" have also been omitted, having become worthless as precedents in the present state of the law. |