Page:Marvin, Legal Bibliography, 1847.djvu/520

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MEE •• MAYNARD'S REPORTS. See Year-Books. MAYO, ROBERT. The Pension Laws of the United States, including sundry Resolutions of Congress, from 1776 to 1833. 8vo. Washington. 1833. MEARA, W. A Treatise on the Law and Practice relating to Elec- tions of Members of Parliament, in Ireland; with Notes, Forms of Indentures, Precepts, &c. 12mo. Dublin. 1841. MEDLAND, W. M. and C. WEOBLY. A Collection of Remark- able and Interesting Criminal Trials, and Actions at Law ; to which is prefixed an Essay on Reprieve and Pardon, &;c. 2 vols. 8vo. London. 1808. MEDOWS, SIR PHIL. Observations concerning the Dominion and. Sovereignty of the Seas, being an Abstract of the Marine Affairs of England. 4to. London. 1689. In a copy of the work, in the possession of Charles Butler, Esq., is the following note by the late Ld. Ch. Baron Parker. " This is a most curious and excellent Treatise ; and though Mr. Selden's Mare Clausum is a learned and ingenious work, and will be ever popular with English- men, yet Sir P. Meadows' Rules for ascertaining the Limits of the Sea, seem to me to be founded on more solid and prudential reasons than Mr. Selden has offered in his book." T. Parker, Sept. 14, 1744, Harg. and But. Co. Lit, 108, a., 261, a. MEEK, A. B. A Supplement to Aikins' Digest of the Laws of Alabama, comprising the Statutes, from 1836 to 1841, inclusive. 8vo. Tuscaloosa. 1842. MEESON, R. AND W. N. WELSBY. Reports of Cases argued and determined in the Courts of Exchequer and Exchequer Chamber, from H. T., 6 Will. IV., to T. T., 2 Vict. 13 vols. 8vo. London. 1837-45. " In the Court of Exchequer, Meeson and Welsby are the sole Report- ers, and these gentlemen, perhaps, publish the most truly valuable of all the Common Law Reports. This superiority must be ascribed partly to the extraordinary talent of the Barons who compose that Court, partly to the absence of those lonjr Crown Cases, which weisfh down the volumes of Messrs. Adolphus and Ellis, and partly to the ability and agreeable style of the Reports themselves ; but, having said thus much in their favor, we shall be excused, if not thanked, for pointing out what appear to us the few blemishes of the work. In the first place, the refer- ences are not, unfrcquently, inaccurate, especially in the figures ; and 508