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NEW LAW BOOKS.

The Subscribers have just published the following valuable Works :-viz.

A NEW AMERICAN LAW DICTIONARY.

“A LAW DICTIONARY, adapted to the Constitution and Laws of the United States of America, and of the several States of the American Union; with references to the civil and other systems of foreign law. By JOHN BOUVIER."

This work, the fruit of upwards of seven years' labour, will contain all the terms of art in the Common Law, used either in the United States or Great Britain; those peculiar to the civil, canon, or ecclesiastical law; those among the French, Scotch, German, Spanish, and other foreign systems, within reach of the author, which may be useful to professional gentlemen, or to men of business; those relating to commerce and manufactures, as connected with law; those used in medical jurisprudence, international law, and the law of nature. All terms of art, technical and peculiar expressions, to be found in the Constitution and Laws of the United States, and of the several States, relating to the executive, legislative or judiciary departments, and all their various branches, and those relating to the rights and duties of citizens, will be severally explained and considered.

In the execution of the plan, the author has, in the first place, defined and explained the various words and phrases, by giving their most enlarged meaning, and then all the different shades of signification of which they are susceptible; secondly, he has divided the subject in the manner, which to him, appeared the most natural, and laid down such principles and rules of law as belong to it; in these cases he has been careful to give an illustration, by citing a case wherever the subject seemed to require it, and referred to other cases supporting the same point; thirdly, whenever the article admitted of it, he has compared it with the laws of other countries, and pointed out their concord or disagreement; and fourthly, he has referred to the authorities, and the abridgments, digests, and ancient and modern treatises, where the subject is to be found, in order to facilitate the researches of the student.

Every word and subject to be found in English Law Dictionaries, which can by any possibility be useful, has been retained; those which are not strictly applicable to the United States, have been condensed, as have been all those which belong exclusively to some foreign system of law. About two thousand new articles will be found in the work, which are not in any Dictionary extant, and those subjects which have been treated of in other Dictionaries, have been written anew, without any regard to the form or matter which may be found in such works.

It is presumed the work will contain one thousand pages of close printing, or perhaps make two handsome octavo volumes, containing six to eight hundred pages each.

In continuation of Leach's Crown Cases.

"CROWN CASES reserved for consideration, and decided by the twelve Judges of England, from the year 1796 to the year 1834, by William Oldnall Russell and Edward Ryan, of Lincoln's Inn, Esqrs., Barristers at Law."

"The decisions upon the Crown Cases reserved for the consideration of the twelve Judges of England, are of the first importance to the due administration of the criminal justice of the country; and in committing to the press those which have occurred during a recent period of more than twenty years, the editors believe that they are making an acceptable communication to the profession and to the public," &c.-Preface. In one volume, 8vo.

MOODY'S CROWN CASES.

IN continuation of the above.-" Crown Cases reserved for consideration, and decided by the twelve Judges of England, from the year 1824 to the year 1837, by WILLIAM MOODY, of Lincoln's Inn, Esq., Barrister at Law. Vol. I."

These Reports will be continued regularly, and will be found very valuable, if not entirely indispensable by every one engaged in Criminal Practice, particularly prosecuting attorneys.

CHITTY'S GENERAL PRACTICE, Vol. 4,
Completing the work.

All the above are issued in very handsome style, and sold at prices that cannot fail giving satisfaction to all who purchase them.

T. & J. W. JOHNSON,

SUCCESSORS TO NICKLIN & JOHNSON,

Law-Booksellers, No. 5, Minor Street.

Philadelphia, November, 1839.

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RELATING TO THE CONCESSIONS OF LAND IN THEIR RESPECTIVE COLONIES;

TOGETHER WITH THE

LAWS OF MEXICO AND TEXAS

ON THE SAME SUBJECT.

TO WHICH IS PREFIXED

JUDGE JOHNSON'S TRANSLATION OF AZO AND MANUEL'S

INSTITUTES OF THE CIVIL LAW OF SPAIN.

BY JOSEPH M. WHITE,

COUNSELLOR AT LAW, AND LATE DELEGATE IN THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES, AND
HONORARY MEMBER OF THE GEORGIA HISTORICAL SOCIETY.

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ENTERED according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1839, by

T. & J. W. JOHNSON,

in the Clerk's Office of the District Court, for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

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