923 résultats
1784GITk493A Riom chez Martin Dégoutte 1784. 4 volumes in-4 (26cm x 20cm) *Tome I: 3 feuillets non chiffrés (titre, épître) II-CXCVIII (notice, dissertation) 2-522pp 1 feuillet non chiffré de table (placé entre les pages VIII et IX) 1 feuillet non chiffré des tables des titres et matières (placé entre les pages CXCVIII et 1) 1 feuillet non chiffré errata *Tome II:2 feuillets non chiffrés (titre, table des titres et articles) 2-899pp *Tome III: 2 feuillets non chiffrés (titre, table des chapitres) 2-686pp 2-80pp imprimées sur 2 colonnes (table des matières contenues dans les 3 premiers volumes) *Tome IV:4 feuillets non chiffrés (titre, approbation et privilège, avertissement) II-VII (table du discours préliminaire imprimé sur 2 colonnes) II-XLVIII (discours préliminaire) 2-858pp 2-19pp (procès verbal) 15 feuillets non chiffrés imprimés sur 2 colonnes (table des lieux contenus dans l'ouvrage et celle des lieux omis, des Seigneurs et Propriétaires cités) 4 feuillets non chiffrés additions et omissions. Pleine basane havane marbrée, dos à nerfs orné de compartiments dorés, pièce de titre havane et de tomaison bleu nuit dans un encadrement de filet et chaînette (titre), de filet, chaînette et fleurs de lys (tomaison), tranches brique, reliure de l'époque. Orné de 4 têtes de chapitre allégorique, identique dans chaque volume. *Tome I: coiffe supérieure arasée, mors du 2e plat fendillé en queue sur 7cm, coins légèrement émoussés,manque angulaire au bas de la page III sans perte de texte *Tome II: 1 coin légèrement émoussé, bordure de la page de titre et du feuillet 898-899 brunie, feuillet 381-382 légèrement déboîté *Tome III: 2 coins légèrement émoussés, bordure de la page de titre brunie *Tome IV: bordure de la page de titre, du feuillet d'approbation et des 4 derniers feuillets brunie. Bel ensemble décoratif, malgré les défauts signalés. texte complet, représentatif de la complexité du Droit sous l'Ancien Régime.
1835GITf702Paris Imprimerie Royale 1835. In-4 1 feuillet non chiffré (titre) 458pp. Exemplaire sans sa reliure, brochage solide, sans rousseurs, bien complet de tout son texte. RARE.
200117892Place_Pub: Washington DC: GPO 2001. very good. 540 wraps footnotes. S. Hrg. 106-1059. GPO paperback
180393882New-York: George F. Hopkins 1803. Original printing not a reprint. Paperback. Minor foxing to exterior; appears to have been disbound from a large collection of assumedlt related works. All pages present. Please refer to photos. Large octavo in printed paper wraps; 56 pages; 22 cm. "Colonel Despard and twelve associates were tried under special commissions of Oyer and terminer and gaol delivery for the county of Surrey." / Early American Imprints. Uncommon. / Law. Trials Treason -- England -- Surrey. Procès Trahison -- Angleterre -- Surrey. Executions. Shaw & Shoemaker 4076 Despard Edward Marcus 1751-1803 -- Trials litigation etc. England -- Surrey. George F. Hopkins paperback
395 pages. Public Acts dealing with: agricultural societies; Mischievous Animals, Registration of Births, Deaths, and Marriages, Bush Fires, Cattle Ranges, Incorporation of Companies, Constitution, County Courts, Assignment for benefit of creditors, Registration of Voters, Firearms, Game Protection, Homestead, Juvenile Reformatory, Crown Lands, Land Grants for Charitable and other purposes, Land Registry, Legal Professions, Licenses, Mechanics Lien, Magistrates, Medicine and Surgery, Minerals (other than coal), Mines (coal prospecting), Mines (coal regulation), Municipalities, New Westminster Incorporation, persons dying intestate, Provincial Royal Jubilee Hospital, Quieting titles to real estate, Railways, Railways - Columbia and Kootenay land grant, Railways - Shuswap and Okanagan land grant, Rivers and Streams - clearing of, Royal Columbian Hospital, Sheriffs, Supply, Timber - marking, University of British Columbia. Private Acts relate to: Ashcroft and Cariboo Railway Co, British Columbia Electric Company, British Columbia Jockey Club, British Columbia Mills, Timber and Trading Company, Columbia and Carbonate Mountain Railway Company, Columbia and Kootenay Railway and Navigation Company, Coquitlam Water Works, Crow's Nest and Kootenay Lake Railway, Hill's Bar Gold Mining Company, London and Canadian Fire Insurance Company, Nanaimo Telephone Company, National Electric Tramway and Lighting Company, News-Advertiser Company, New Westminster Electric Light Company, Okanagan and Kootenay Railway Company, Pacific Coast Fire Insurance Company, Westmister Street Railway Company, Westminster and Vancouver Tramway Company, Vancouver Incorporation, Vancouver Street Railways Company, Victoria Lumber and Manufacturing Company. Binding intact. Above-average wear. Usual library markings. A sound copy. Book
179920101Paris, chez Deroy et chez Moret, an VII (1799) ; 2 tomes reliés en un volume in-12 (164 mm), demi-veau à petits coins, faux nerfs et titre dorés ; [2] de titre blanc en réserve dans un ovale rouge et reste du texte en rouge encadré, IV, XXXXVIII, 223, [1 bl.] ; [2] de titre du tome II, 249, [1 bl.], VI pp., frontispice gravé représentant la lecture de la sentence de mort, au tribunal, au grand désespoir des prévenus.
1025L014991Fair. New Haven: Printed by Oliver Steele 1816. Full leather darkened at spine. Front hinge a little loose. Foxing throughout. 494 pps. plus table of contents and errata page. "American text writing as a significant force in our legal development begins in 1816 with Reeve"s Baron and Femme.": Pound The Formative Era of American Law 140. hardcover
Pages 413-452 plus xvi pages of great vintage ads. Many great black and white photos. Features: "Indian Ridge" - The Summer Home of Dr.l F.B. Harrington, at Ipswich, Massachusetts; Decorations and Furnishings for the Home - IV - Furnishing a Young Girl's Room; English Garden Mazes; A Group of New England Homes - nice two-page photo spread of homes belonging to Mr. E.B. Stearns at Brookline, T.P. Hollander on Misery Island, and Mrs. Frances Robeson at Brookline; Handicraftsman - Home-made Pottery; Glue for Model Making; The Steam Radiator in France; Residence of William L. Bailey, Esq., at Ardmore, PA; The Mirror; The Wasp's Year (life cycle); Stucco Houses of Distinction; The City of the Sun; Garden Notes - Tennis Courts; Conservatory and Greenhouse Heating; Glass Espalier Walls; L. Wolff Mfg. Co. ad features Chicago home of Walter H. Miller; Back cover color ad for the Columbia Grafonola includes photos of ten famous vocalists of the day; and more. Printed on glossy stock. Complete and unmarked with average wear. Covers loose but present. A worthy copy of this great vintage issue. Magazine
97-192, 126 [ads] pages. Profusely illustrated with detailed drawings and black and white photos. Printed upon glossy stock. Includes dozens of magnificently illustrated ads. Features: The Residence of Charles D. Blaney, Esq., Saratoga, California - Willis Polk & Co, Architects; The Art of the Middle Ages - Part I; The Destruction of Historic Buildings as Revealed by the Official French War Photographs - Part III - Parish Churches; The Memorial Quadrangle of Yale College - James Gamble Rogers, Architect; English Architectural Decoration - Part IV - text and measured drawings; The Small Country School House; Community Courts for Factory Workers; The Architect's Library - War Books of the Cathedrals - Part II - Verdun; Notes and Comments. Above-average wear. Lacking covers. Two small binding holes near spine. Last page of advertising loose but present. Not pretty but a worthy vintage copy. Book
4257223 Janvier 1635.Manuscrit in-4 de 42 pages dans une reliure élégante du XXème siècle.Requète envoyée par le capitaine Don Antonio de la Daga y Vargas au notaire Diego Sanchez Vadillo,afin de payer une somme à la suite d'un héritage.En langue espagnole. Manuscrit en état moyen.reliure parfaite.
195318425Aoste, Imprimerie Valdôtaine, 1953 ; grand in-8, pleine basane havane, dos à nerfs décoré de motifs géométriques à froid, titre doré, premier plat décoré et doré, roulette dorée d'intérieur (reliure de l’éditeur) ; XXXII, 510, (6) pp., 36 illustrations dy compris le frontispice, dont 8 en couleurs.
17747572côté et paraphé par Nicolas François Gemeau, écuyer, Conseiller du Roi, Lieutenant général civil et criminel de Police en ladite Sénéchaussée. Manuscrit in-folio de 60 feuillets écrits et 6 blancs.
188918721889 Edition Hachette, Paris, 1889-1890, 5 volumes demi-chagrin, couvertures conservées. (ix), 488; 502; 450; 455; 422 pages. 1) La Vendée. 2) L'Ouest et le Sud-Ouest. 3) Le Sud-Est, l'Est et la Région de Paris. 4) La Fontière du Nord et l'Alsace. 5) La Lorraine, le Nord et le Pas-de-Calais. Les Châtiments.
2007549552007. North Carolina Court of Appeals Reports. Raleigh NC: Administrative Office of the Courts. Vols. 1-180 1968-2007. Ex-private law library very good. See digital image. $795. unknown books
2003mon0000082835HM Magistrates' Courts Service I 2003-01-01. Paperback. Good. in x in x in. Ex-library book usual markings. Clean copy sound binding. HM Magistrates' Courts Service I paperback
114727Série de cinq volumes in-12 de 90 x 150 mm environ comportant 40 textes. Demi-chagrin bleu, dos à quatre nerfs portant titres et tomaisons dorés, gardes marbrées. Intérieur frais et ensemble en bon état malgré les défauts à signaler : un dos insolé, de discrets frottements sur les coins et les coiffes.
7573In-4 de 162 ff. manuscrits recto-verso.
1802WRCAM24229Albany: Printed for Collier and Stockwell 1802. 796pp. Contemporary calf morocco label stamped in gilt. Calf scuffed and worn front hinge cracking rear hinge tender. Light even tanning; foxing. Good. An important - and possibly the most extensive - record of Congressional debates concerning the nature of the Judiciary and its establishment as an independent branch of the government in the wake of the Judiciary Act of 1801. Two versions of these debates were printed in 1802: one in Philadelphia; and the present Albany New York version which bears imprints by two different sets of printers. This Albany version differs from the Philadelphia printing in that it includes both the Senate and House debates. It also appears to have been edited from a pro- Jeffersonian viewpoint mentioning in the preface that the "judicial power has armed itself in defence of its own supposed rights and independence." <br> <br> The election of 1800 represented the end of Federalist control of the Executive branch after twelve years. On the eve of Jefferson's inauguration President Adams nominated and the Senate confirmed John Marshall as chief justice of the Supreme Court. In addition Congress quickly passed a law reducing the number of Supreme Court justices to five took away their Circuit Court duties and reorganized the Circuit Courts with sixteen new justices all of whom were nominated and confirmed just weeks prior to the inauguration. The intention was to keep the Judiciary as an adjunct of the Federalists. The Federalists waited about a year to organize and one of the first measures introduced in the Senate in 1802 was a repeal of the Act of 1801 at Jefferson's insistence. The Senate deadlocked and Vice President Burr cast the deciding vote against the measure but the act was repealed after a subsequent vote. The Supreme Court went back to having six justices all of whom headed one of six U.S. Circuit Courts. <br> <br> Repeal of the 1801 Judiciary Act helped reduce Democrat-Republican influence in the U.S. courts; but as with so many triumphs this victory came with an unanticipated result: one minor aspect of the 1801 Act was the appointment by the President of the justices of the peace for Washington and Alexandria. On March 2 Adams nominated and the next day the Senate confirmed forty-two justices but four of the commissions had not been delivered by midnight when Adams' term expired. One of these was to William Marbury who sued after Jefferson ordered Secretary of State Madison to withhold the commission. The case went to the Supreme Court in 1803 where Marbury lost primarily because the Court had just emerged from the Federalist-Democrat-Republican political thicket and a new struggle with the executive branch was to be avoided. However the case also included a hidden doorway through which Marshall hustled to declare the independence of the Judiciary from the blatant partisanship of recent years and claim its equality with the other two branches of government. In addition the Court ruled that Section 13 of the Judiciary Act of 1789 which authorized such a writ was contrary to the Constitution and therefore invalid. It was the first time the Supreme Court declared a law of Congress void but this was a power the Court itself possessed with the greatest timidity. This was the only case while Marshall was chief justice in which the Court specifically reversed an Act of Congress. The concept would not be employed again by the full court until the Dred Scott decision fifty-four years later. COHEN 1203. SHAW & SHOEMAKER 3271. SABIN 19101 variant imprint. Printed for Collier and Stockwell unknown books
1802WRCAM32306Philadelphia 1802. 2324pp. Half title. Contemporary three-quarter morocco and marbled boards spine gilt leather label. Some scattered foxing lightly toned. About very good. An important record of the evolution of American law and the development of judicial independence in the early republic. This is one of two printings of the debates over the repeal of the Judiciary Act of 1801. This version is edited from a Federalist perspective with critical comments on the debates as recorded in the NATIONAL INTELLIGENCER an organ of the Jeffersonian Republicans. The debate over the repeal of the Judiciary Act of 1801 addressed issues of judicial review and the role size and authority of the judiciary branch issues which led ultimately to the landmark case of Marbury v. Madison. The 1801 act passed by a Federalist Congress reduced the number of Supreme Court justices from six to five created new circuits and allowed outgoing President John Adams to appoint several new federal judges the so-called "midnight judges." Jefferson opposed the 1801 act and though it was overturned by the Judiciary Act of 1802 the federal judiciary remained fundamentally unaltered. The Marbury v. Madison decision of 1803 solidified the notion of judicial review of legislation and elevated the Supreme Court to a level of equality with the executive and legislative branches. <br> <br> A vital document exemplifying the debates over the judiciary in the Federalist era and emblematic of the political skirmishes of the day. COHEN 1058. SABIN 19105. SHAW & SHOEMAKER 3273. OXFORD COMPANION TO THE SUPREME COURT pp.474- 75. hardcover books
Nine volumes in one. Folio. 350 mm. Collation: Engraved title, 10 leaves (the last blank), 62 p. ; 4 leaves (the first blank), pp. 63-94; 9 leaves (the first blank), pp. 95-200; 19 leaves (the first blank), pp. 201-406; 7 leaves , pp. 407-443; 22 leaves, pp. 444-728; 4 leaves, pp. 729-774; 3 leaves (the first blank), pp. 775-793; 4 leaves, pp. 794-827, 6 leaves. Scattered damp stain, heaviest on last leaf (colophon). Early thumb indexes mostly present. German black letter gothic fraktur type; large woodcut initials; and decorative head and tail pieces throughout. Each sectional title bears Maximilian's large (150 x 185 mm) coat of arms. Most impressive too are the six pages with large woodcuts of 10 fish and one lobster. Generally clean and tight. Original full alum tawed pigskin over beveled oak boards binding; nicely tooled in blind; with Maximillian's simple arms, in a circle, within a 2" diamond. Five raised bands. Original brass clasps present. Early manuscript ownerships; Printed paper ownerships of the Kgl. Bezirksgericht Nurnberg in various places. Several stamped Nazi Eagle ownerships of the Oberlandesgerichts Nurnberg. First Edition of the Codex Maximilianus. Bavaria, under Maximilian I (1598-1651), was a country of around 1 million inhabitants, with agriculture and salt production (a ducal monopoly) being the dominant sectors of the economy. It became a key player in the events leading up to the Thirty Years War. In 1608, Bavaria occupied and annexed the hitherto free Imperial and Lutheran city of Donauworth. The action caused the Protestant princes and cities to found the Protestant Union. Bavaria then concluded an alliance with the Austrian and Hungarian Estates. In 1609 Bavaria became the leading force in the newly founded (Catholic) Holy League, an alliance formed against the Protestant Union. Consolidating his governance, Duke Maximilian, in 1616 introduced a new Bavarian Landrecht (Law Code), which was a compilation, reworking, and summation of all the laws and codes. Includes the codes of: Judicial Procedure; Court Laws; State Laws; Police Law; Forestry, hunting, and fishing regulations; Etc. It became a widespread the model for law and legislation for over 150 years. Stobbe II, 366. Very Scarce. Only a handful of copies are recorded in U.S. libraries. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! CHEST 2/1
1746217802London: Various publishers 1746. Mostly first editions unless otherwise noted below. 1 vols. 8vo. Contemporary calf backed marbled boards. Binding worn internally clean. Mostly first editions unless otherwise noted below. 1 vols. 8vo. A good single collection relating to the trials of Admirals Mathews and Lestock which resulted from their engagement with the French and Spanish fleet near Toulon in February 1744. The battle part of the War of the Austrian Succession is said to have "marked the lowest pitch reached in discipline and fighting and efficiency by the fleet in the 18th century and it had a very bad effect in confirming the pedantic system of tactics set up by the old Fighting Instructions . " - Encyclopedia Britannica 11th ed. To the puzzlement of many contemporary observors Rear-Admiral Richard Lestock who was second in command and who kept his distance from the battle was acquitted. In contrast Vice-Admiral Thomas Mathews who engaged the enemy however confusedly was censured and was one of seven ship-captains to be discharged from the service.<br /> <br /> A hand-written table of contents on the front free flyleaf gives a list of the contents amended in pencil by a later hand. <br /> <br /> 1. Corbett Thomas. An account of the expedition of the British fleet to Sicily in the years 1718 1719 and 1720. Under the command of Sir George Byng Bart. . Collected from the Admiral's manuscripts and other original papers. With folding table. For J. and R. tonson 1739. Third edition. Lacking final leaf pp. 95-96. Sir George Byng the naval hero was the father of Admiral John Byng who presided over the cout martial of Lestock and was himself court-martialed and executed a few years later. ESTC T 142387.<br /> <br /> 2. Mathews Thomas. Authentick letters from Admiral Mathews to the Sec--t----s of st--te the L----ds of the Ad------ty &c. Relating to his expedition to the Mediterranean with their answers . 2 5-29 29-30 30-68 pp. Printed for W. Webb. Title leaf detached. ESTC T 22798.<br /> <br /> 3. Mathews Thomas. Admiral Mathews's conduct in the late engagement vindicated. Wherein the whole affair is compendiously stated. The several pieces published by Mr. Lestock examined with candor. . By a gentleman of the Royal Navy. For M. Cooper 1745. Lacking half-title. ESTC T 115878<br /> <br /> 4. Mathews Thomas. The Charge of Thomas Mathews Esq; also the answer and defence of Admiral Mathews to the said charge &c. For E. Cooper n.d. `746. ESTC T 182897.<br /> <br /> 5. Lestock Richard. Vice-Adm--l L-st-k's Account of the Late Engagement near Toulon between His Majesty's fleet and the fleets of France and Spain : as presented by him the 12th of March 1744-5 : also letters to and from Adm---l L-st--k relating thereto since his arrival in England with notes. London: for M. Cooper 1745. ESTCT4221.<br /> <br /> 6. Lestock Richard. Vice-Admal Lestock's recapitulation as spoke by him at the Bar of the Honble House of Commons on Tuesday the 9th of April 1745. Containing his remarks on the evidence that have been examined . printed for John Millan 1745. ESTC T 177090.<br /> <br /> 7. Lestock Richard. The sentence pronounc'd by the Court-martial sitting aboard His Majesty's Ship the Prince of Orange at Deptford on Tuesday the 3d of June 1746 on Vice-Admiral Lestock. printed for M. Cooper 1746. ESTC T 47456. Provenance: Philip.C. Duschnes; Paul Peralta-Ramos with stamp Various publishers unknown
1559717111559. London 1559. London 1559. "The Booke That Teacheth" Great Britain. Justices of the Peace. Courts Leet and Baron. The Contentes of This Boke. Fyrst the Booke for a Iustice of Peace. The Boke that Teacheth to Kepe a Courte Baron Or a Lete. The Boke Teachynge to Kepe a Courte Hundred. The Boke Called Returna Brevium. The Boke Called Carta Feodi Conteynynge the Forme of Dedes Releasses Indentures Obligacions Acquitaunces Letters of Atturney Letters of Permutacion Testamentes And Other Thynges. And the Boke of the Ordinaunce to be Observed by the Offycers of the Kynges Escheker for Fees Takinge. London: In Fletestreete within Temple barre At the Signe of the Hande and Starre by Richard Tottil The XIII. Daye of Maye. Anno Domini 1559. 195 11 ff. Lacking Final two blank leaves. Octavo 5-1/4" x 3-1/2". Recent period-style calf blind rules to boards raised bands to spine endpapers renewed blank interleaves added in a few places. Moderate toning edges trimmed touching headlines in a few places worming with occasional minor loss to text repairs to corners of a few leaves. Faint stain and faint fragment of an annotation to final leaf early illegible owner signatures to title page. $2500. First printed in 1505 by Richard Pynson this is a handy anthology of treatises for justices of the peace sheriffs bailiffs. It includes the Carta Foedi and exchequer ordinance. It is sometime attributed erroneously to Sir Anthony Fitzherbert. OCLC locates 5 copies of this edition in North American law libraries Columbia Harvard LA County Library of Congress University of Minnesota. English Short-Title Catalogue S102175. Beale A Bibliography of Early English Law Books T154. unknown books
1746217802London: Various publishers 1746. Mostly first editions unless otherwise noted below. 1 vols. 8vo. Contemporary calf backed marbled boards. Binding worn internally clean. Mostly first editions unless otherwise noted below. 1 vols. 8vo. Courts Martial of Mathews and Lestock. A good single collection relating to the trials of Admirals Mathews and Lestock which resulted from their engagement with the French and Spanish fleet near Toulon in February 1744. The battle part of the War of the Austrian Succession is said to have "marked the lowest pitch reached in discipline and fighting and efficiency by the fleet in the 18th century and it had a very bad effect in confirming the pedantic system of tactics set up by the old Fighting Instructions . " - Encyclopedia Britannica 11th ed. To the puzzlement of many contemporary observors Rear-Admiral Richard Lestock who was second in command and who kept his distance from the battle was acquitted. In contrast Vice-Admiral Thomas Mathews who engaged the enemy however confusedly was censured and was one of seven ship-captains to be discharged from the service.<br/><br/>A hand-written table of contents on the front free flyleaf gives a list of the contents amended in pencil by a later hand. <br/><br/>1. Corbett Thomas. An account of the expedition of the British fleet to Sicily in the years 1718 1719 and 1720. Under the command of Sir George Byng Bart. . Collected from the Admiral's manuscripts and other original papers. With folding table. For J. and R. tonson 1739. Third edition. Lacking final leaf pp. 95-96. Sir George Byng the naval hero was the father of Admiral John Byng who presided over the cout martial of Lestock and was himself court-martialed and executed a few years later. ESTC T 142387.<br/><br/>2. Mathews Thomas. Authentick letters from Admiral Mathews to the Sec--t----s of st--te the L----ds of the Ad------ty &c. Relating to his expedition to the Mediterranean with their answers . 2 5-29 29-30 30-68 pp. Printed for W. Webb. Title leaf detached. ESTC T 22798.<br/><br/>3. Mathews Thomas. Admiral Mathews's conduct in the late engagement vindicated. Wherein the whole affair is compendiously stated. The several pieces published by Mr. Lestock examined with candor. . By a gentleman of the Royal Navy. For M. Cooper 1745. Lacking half-title. ESTC T 115878<br/><br/>4. Mathews Thomas. The Charge of Thomas Mathews Esq; also the answer and defence of Admiral Mathews to the said charge &c. For E. Cooper n.d. `746. ESTC T 182897.<br/><br/>5. Lestock Richard. Vice-Adm--l L-st-k's Account of the Late Engagement near Toulon between His Majesty's fleet and the fleets of France and Spain : as presented by him the 12th of March 1744-5 : also letters to and from Adm---l L-st--k relating thereto since his arrival in England with notes. London: for M. Cooper 1745. ESTCT4221.<br/><br/>6. Lestock Richard. Vice-Admal Lestock's recapitulation as spoke by him at the Bar of the Honble House of Commons on Tuesday the 9th of April 1745. Containing his remarks on the evidence that have been examined . printed for John Millan 1745. ESTC T 177090.<br/><br/>7. Lestock Richard. The sentence pronounc'd by the Court-martial sitting aboard His Majesty's Ship the Prince of Orange at Deptford on Tuesday the 3d of June 1746 on Vice-Admiral Lestock. printed for M. Cooper 1746. ESTC T 47456. Provenance: Philip.C. Duschnes; Paul Peralta-Ramos with stamp Various publishers unknown books