Page:Marvin, Legal Bibliography, 1847.djvu/187

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CAR CARPENTER, THOMAS. Report of the Trial of Col. Aaron Burr, for Treason and Misdemeanor, in the C. C. of the U. S. for the District of Virginia. 3 vols. 8vo. Richmond. 1807. There is another report of Burr's Trial by D. ftottrtsaa. 2 vols. 8vo. Philadelphia. 1808. /""^ CARPENTER, S. Statement of the Evidence upon the Contro- verted Election for Saltash. 8vo. London. 1808. CARPMAEL, W. The Law of Patents for Inventions, familiarly- Explained, for the use of Inventors and Patentees. 3d ed, 8vo. London. 1842. It was designed for inventors and others unlearned in the law,1)ut may be consulted with profit by professional readers on points of prac- tice, and for the scientific illustrations which abound in the work. 6 Jurist, 143. CARRIERS. The Carrier's Guide and Companion. 8vo. Lon- don. 1760. CARRIGHAN, T. A Letter to the Hon. R. Peel, concerning the Doctrine and Practice of the Court of Chancery. 8vo. London. 1826. Pamphlet. CARRINGTON, F. A. and PAYNE, J. Reports of Cases at Nisi Prius, in the Queen's Bench, Common Pleas, and Exche- quer, together with Cases tried in the Central Criminal Court, and on the Circuit, from Michaelmas Term, 1823, to Easter Term, 1841. 9 vols, royal 8vo. London. 1823-1841. " In the Reports of Carrington and Payne, there are a considerable number of trivial and unimportant cases mixed up, we are willing to allow, with some others of a very different nature." 2 L. O. 35. CARRINGTON, F. A. and MARSHMAN, J. R. Reports of Cases at Nisi Prius, in the Queen's Bench, Common Pleas, and Exchequer, together with Cases tried in the Central Criminal Court, and on the Circuit, from 3d Vict, to 5th Vict. 1 vol. 8vo. London. 1843. Carrington and Marshman's Reports are found fault with, because they are unnecessarily prolix. " Fifty-five Cases are to be found in these Reports on the subject of Confessions, and no less than eight out of that number decide that the prisoner's examination is admissible without calling the magistrate or his clerk." The reporters have swelled the size of their volume by inserting several long pleas, that are readily accessible in books of Precedents. 27 L. M. 340. 175 ^