Page:Legal Bibliography, Numbers 1 to 12, 1881 to 1890.djvu/39

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SOULE & BUGBEE'S LEGAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. 5 BARGAINS. We offer the following special bargains for this number. The prices are 7iei cas/t. Massachusetts Reports, viz., Mass., 17 vols. ; Pickering, 24 vols. ; Met- calf, 13 vols. ; Gushing, 12 vols. ; in all 66 vols. Original editions, newly bound, $99.00. California Reports. 59 vols, (good set). $210.00. Oregon Reports. 8 vols. $32.00. Bissell's United States Circuit Court Reports. S vols. $40.00. National Bankruptcy Register. 17 vols. $50.00. Abbott's New York Practice Reports. iVcry series. 16 vols. $40.00. Howell's State Trials. 34 vols. (Sergeant Tristram's copv.) $125.00. English Statutes up to 1776. ("Pickering's edition.") 31 vols. $20.00. Viner's Abridgment. (Fine copy.) 30 vols. $30.00. Lives of the Lord Chancellors, 10 vols. ; Lives of the Chief Justices, 6 vols.; Life of Lord Campbell, 2 vols. ; Index, i vol. $20.00. Crown Cases Reserved: Dearsley; Dearsley & Bell; Bell; Leigh & Cave. (These four volumes fill the gap between the " British Crown Cases " and the Law Reports.) New half calf. $20.00. Sir William Blackstone's Reports. 2 vols. 182S. New half calf. $6.50. English Admiralty Reports. 9 vols. (Containing Chr. Robinson. Edwards, Marriott, Acton, Dodson, Haggard, and W. Robinson.) $54.00. Jacob's Fisher's Digest. 9 vols. $40.00. Webster's Quarto Dictionary. 18S2. $6.50. Lord Brougham's Speeches. 4 vols., cloth. Edinburgh, 183S. $6.0fj. Hardcastle's Life of Lord Campbell. 2 vols. $3.00. American Diplomatic Correspondence. 12 vols. 1S33. $10.00. The Works of Sir William Jones. 8 vols. , quarto. 1799-1S01. $30.00. Works of Edward Livingston. 2 vols. 1S73. $6.00. Randolph's Memoir, Correspondence, etc., of Thomas Jefferson. j[ vols., boards. 1S29. $6.00. Reeve's History of the English Law (American reprint). 5 vols. Cloth, $10. THE ESSENTIALS OF THE LAW. Under this excellent title Prof. Marshall D. Ewell, of the Union College of Law, of Chicago, has published two volumes which are capital te.xt-books for students, and also are refreshing reading for practising lawyers. Vol. L gives, in 620 closely printed duodecimo pages — not selections from Blackstone's Commentaries, — but all of that legal classic which is not absolutely obsolete. By putting matter of subordinate interest in fine type and by emphasizing in black type the catchwords and leading ideas. Prof. Ewell has presented Blackstone in a manner admirably adapted to arrest the attention and impress the memory. This volume has been already adopted as a text-book in law schools at Washington, Chicago, Columbia, Mo., Austin, Te.x., and elsewhere. Vol. II. (just issued) gives, in the same attractive style of type, the substance of Stephen on Pleading, Smith on Contracts, and Ada.ms ON Equity, thus uniting in one volume a student's compendium of the law on these important subjects. The price of the two volumes together, in leatherette, is S4.00, }!ei ; in law sheep or half law calf, $5.00, wt'/. Vol.1 (Blackstone), separately, is $2.50, iu-t, in leatherette, or $3.00, vet, in law sheep or half law calf. Vol. II., separately, is $2.00, net, in leatherette, and $2.50, net, in law sheep .or half law calf. NOT FOR PETTIFOGGERS. Only the thoroughly educated lawyer, the learned judge, and the con- scientious and ambitious student, can appreciate V.a.llace"s The Re- porters ; but to them it is a mine of interesting and valuable information. The fourth edition (law sheep, or half law calf, $5.50, net) is increased forty pgr cent, in size over the third edition, and is brought down to the year 1882. It is a graphic sketch of the early English reports and reporters, with judicious comments on their comparative authority. SCHOULER ON EXECUTORS (NEW). Although the subject has been treated, incidentally, in works on Wills, although there are excellent and voluminous English works which discuss it, and although many States have local treatises on Probate and kindred matters, there has been, until now. no separate and general work on the American law of Executors and Administrators. James Schouler, author of treatises on Personal Property, Bailments, etc., having had his attention drawn to the need of some such work, by practical experience in this special branch of the law, h.as written, and we have just published, a very good and very practical book on this subject. Without instituting comparisons with other text-writers on this important branch of the law, we claim that no work of a single volume is ah'eady be- fore the professional public presenting historically and logically the whole English and American law of executors and administrators, with a due re- gard for the modern practical needs of such fiduciaries and their legal ad- visers ; separating the main subject from those most abstruse topics which pertain to Wills and Testamentary Trusts, and giving to the excellent points of our American probate practice the prominence justly deserved. Hon. A.masa A. Redfield, of New York, writes thus to the author : " I have examined, with great interest, the system and labor which your work reveals, and I think it may fairly be said that the table of cases cited shows that no work exists so useful to the practising lawyer as your own." The very able critic who writes the book reviews for the A.merican Law Review says: — "The work is one which will be hailed with great s.itisfaction by the whole profession. The want of an American book on the subject has been keenly felt, and Mr. Schouler may well consider himself as a pioneer author in this field of American jurisprudence, and, as such, will surely reap the benefit of his arduous labors, in the shape of the popularity and extensive sale of this book." Price, bound in law sheep, $5.50, net ; delivered for $5.75. SUBROGATION. This subject is so little understood by the general practitioner, that the new work by H. N. Sheldon, on The L.w of Subrog.vtion, has found a larger and more immediate sale than special treatises generally attain. The doctrine of Subrogation is growing in importance. Its principles are now of a very general application among successive claimants of the same property by mortgage, lien, or purchase ; among principals and sureties ; sureties who successively become liable for the same debt ; co- sureties ; joint-debtors ; and persons whose property is held to answer for the same debt or burden, whether the obligation, upon themselves or their property, is primary or secondary. Its doctrines are also frequently re- sorted to for the purpose of settling the rights of successive parties to bills and notes ; of executors, heirs, devisees, legatees, and other persons in- terested in the administration of a decedent's estate. It is also of general application in the law of insurance, not only for the benefit of the insurer himself, but also for the protection of persons who have conflicting rights to the property insured. This is a very refreshing book, evidently written with the deliberate intent to state the law as it is, in the clearest and briefest way. . . . For the purposes of the prac- titioner, the work is done to admiration. Its arrangement is logical, and its statements terse, vigorous, and abundantly supported by authorities. It is not only honest, but able, and we take great pleasure in welcoming it as a valuable accession to the liter- ature of ourguild. — American La-jj Review. Price, in law sheep, or in half law calf. $3.50, net. PRIMITIVE OWNERSHIP IN LAND. We have just published The Early History of Landholding AMONG THE GERMANS. By D. W. Ross, Ph.D. (Cloth, $3.00, net.) In this volume the author combats the theory of recent writers that the original holding of land among the German tribes was communistic. Although not a law-book, Mr. Ross' work will be especially interesting to lawyers, as bearing on the foundations of the English law of real property. "There can be no question as to the breadth and variety of the facts he has elicited, the patient thoroughness of his study, and the skill and effect with which they are disposed." — Literary World.