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PRACTICE OF PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS Throughout Great Britain and Ireland.

COMPRISING

THE DUTIES OF RETURNING OFFICERS AND THEIR DEPUTIES, TOWN CLERKS, AGENTS, POLL-CLERKS, &c.,

AND THE

Law of Election Expenses, Corrupt Practices, & Illegal payments.

WITH

AN APPENDIX OF STATUTES AND AN INDEX.

BY HENRY JEFFREYS BUSHBY, Esq.,

One of the Metropolitan Police Magistrates, sometime Recorder of Colchester.

FOURTH EDITION,

Adapted to and embodying the recent changes in the Law, including the Ballot Act, the Instructions to Returning Officers in England and Scotland issued by the Home Office, and the whole of the Statute Law relating to the subject.

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A Companion Volume to the above, in crown 8vo., price 8s. cloth, lettered, THE LAW AND PRACTICE OF ELECTION PETITIONS, With an Appendix containing the Parliamentary Elections Act, 1868, the General Rules for the Trial of Election Petitions in England, Scotland, and Ireland, Forms of Petitions, &c. By HENRY HARDCASTLE, of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-Law.

"Mr. Hardcastle gives us an original treatise with foot notes, and he has evidently taken very considerable pains to make his work a reliable guide. Beginning with the effect of the Election Petitions Act, 1868, he takes his readers step by step through the new procedure. His mode of treating the subject of 'particulars' will be found

extremely useful, and he gives all the law and
practice in a very small compass. In an Appendix
is supplied the Act and the Rules.
We can
thoroughly recommend Mr. Hardcastle's book as a
concise manual on the law and practice of election
petitions."-Law Times.

Now ready, Volume I., price 30s.; Volume II., price 24s.;
and Volume III., Part I., price 5s.

REPORTS OF THE DECISIONS

OF THE

JUDGES FOR THE TRIAL OF ELECTION PETITIONS

IN ENGLAND AND IRELAND.

PURSUANT TO THE PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS ACT, 1868.

BY EDWARD LOUGHLIN O'MALLEY AND HENRY HARDCASTLE, BARRISTERS-AT-LAW,

STEVENS & HAYNES, BELL YARD, TEMPLE BAR.

Stevens and Haynes' Series of Reprints of the Early Reporters.

SOME RARE LAW BOOKS.

[From "THE ALBANY LAW JOURNAL."]

33

"Law books are not generally things of beauty. There is nothing particularly gratifying to the esthetic department of the human organism in the conventional typography and sheep-skin. Some of our publishers give considerable attention to the mechanical execution of their books, and deserve and receive a good degree of credit therefor. But, after all, their labours seldom please the eye. In most marked contrast to even the very best of our books, are a series of law books that have been recently issued by Messrs. STEVENS & HAYNES, of London. They are reprints of some of the scarcest of the Old English Reports, and in their mechanical execution would delight the heart of Aldus Manutius, Thuanus, or any other admirer of elegant editions. The black letter type of the originals is faithfully reproduced, the curious old-style spelling and interchange of letters have been closely followed, while the rich antique calf covers are, no doubt, superior to anything that served to encase the original Reports. These editions have been carefully prepared, and some of the volumes have been enriched with notes added in MS. to some copy of the original by its learned owner generations ago.

"This enterprise of Messrs. STEVENS & HAYNES is a matter of universal interest, and appeals to every lover of elegant books. The works which they have reproduced are those which were the scarcest, and for copies of which the most exorbitant prices were demanded. The following is a brief description of the matter of these volumes."

BELLEWE'S CASES, T. RICHARD II.

In 8vo., price 31. 35., bound in calf antique,

LES ANS DU ROY RICHARD LE SECOND.

Per

Collect' ensembl' hors les abridgments de Statham, Fitzherbert, et Brooke. RICHARD BELLEWE, de Lincolns Inne. 1585. Reprinted from the Original

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highly creditable to the spirit and enterprise of private publishers. The work is an important link in our legal history; there are no year books of the reign of Richard II., and Bellewe supplied the only substitute by carefully extracting and collecting all the cases he could find, and he did it in the most convenient form-that of alphabetical arrangement in the order of subjects, so that the work is a digest as well as a book of law reports. It is in fact a collection of cases of the reign of Richard II., arranged according to their subjects in alphabetical order. It is, therefore, one of the most intelligible and interesting legal memorials of the Middle Ages."-Law Times.

CUNNINGHAM'S REPORTS.

In 8vo., price 37. 35., calf antique,

CUNNINGHAM'S (T.) Reports in K. B., 7 to 10 Geo. II.; to which is prefixed a Proposal for rendering the Laws of England clear and certain, humbly offered to the Consideration of both Houses of Parliament. Third Edition, with numerous Corrections. By THOMAS TOWNSEND BUCKNILL, Barrister-at-Law.

"The instructive chapter which precedes the cases, entitled 'A proposal for rendering the Laws of England clear and certain,' gives the volume a degree of peculiar interest, independent of the value of many of the reported cases. That chapter begins with words which ought, for the information of every people, to be printed in letters of gold. They are as follows: 'Nothing conduces more to the

peace and prosperity of every nation than good laws and the due execution of them.' The history of the civil law is then rapidly traced. Next a history is given of English Reporters, beginning with the reporters of the Year Books from 1 Edw. III. to 12 Hen. VIII.-being near 200 years-and afterwards to the time of the author."-Canada Law Journal.

34

STEVENS & HAYNES, BELL YARD, TEMPLE BAR.

Stevens and Haynes' Series of Reprints of the Early Reporters,

CHOYCE CASES IN CHANCERY.

In 8vo., price 27. 25., calf antique,

THE PRACTICE OF THE HIGH COURT OF CHANCERY. With the Nature of the several Offices belonging to that Court. And the Reports of many Cases wherein Releif hath been there had, and where denyed.

"This volume, in paper, type, and binding (like "Bellewe's Cases ") is a facsimile of the antique edition. All who buy the one should buy the other."-Canada Law Journal.

In 8vo., price 37. 3s., calf antique,

SIR G. COOKE'S COMMON PLEAS REPORTS In the Reigns of Queen Anne, and Kings George I. and II.

The Third Edition, with Additional Cases and References contained in the Notes taken from L. C. J. EYRE'S MSS. by Mr. Justice NARES, edited by THOMAS TOWNSEND BUCKNILL, of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-Law.

"Law books never can die or remain long dead so long as Stevens and Haynes are willing to continue them or revive them when dead. It is certainly surprising to see with what facial accuracy

an old volume of Reports may be produced by these modern publishers, whose good taste is only equalled by their enterprise.”—Canada Law Journal.

BROOKE'S NEW CASES WITH MARCH'S TRANSLATION. In 8vo., 1873, price 41. 45., calf antique,

BROOKE'S (Sir Robert) New Cases in the time of Henry VIII., Edward VI., and Queen Mary, collected out of Brooke's Abridgment, and arranged under years, with a table, together with MARCH'S (John) Translation of BROOKE'S New Cases in the time of Henry VIII., Edward VI., and Queen Mary, collected out of BROOKE'S Abridgment, and reduced alphabetically under their proper heads and titles, with a table of the principal matters. In one handsome volume. 8vo. 1873. "Both the original and the translation having long been very scarce, and the mispaging and other errors in March's translation making a new and corrected edition peculiarly desirable, Messrs.

Stevens and Haynes have reprinted the two books in one volume, uniform with the preceding volumes of the series of Early Reports."-Canada Law Journal.

KELYNGE'S (W.) REPORTS.

In 8vo., 1873, price 41. 45., calf antique,

KELYNGE'S (William) Reports of Cases in Chancery, the King's Bench, &c., from the 3rd to the 9th year of His late Majesty King George II., during which time Lord King was Chancellor, and the Lords Raymond and Hardwicke were Chief Justices of England. To which are added, seventy New Cases not in the First Edition. Third Edition. In one handsome volume. 8vo. 1873.

KELYNG'S (SIR JOHN) CROWN CASES.

In 8vo., 1873, price 4/. 45., calf antique,

KELYNG'S (Sir J.) Reports of Divers Cases in Pleas of the Crown in the Reign of King Charles II., with Directions to Justices of the Peace, and others; to which are added, Three Modern Cases, viz., Armstrong and Lisle, the King and Plummer, the Queen and Mawgridge. Third Edition, containing several additional Cases never before printed, together with a TREATISE UPON THE LAW AND PROCEEDINGS IN CASES OF HIGH TREASON, first published in 1793. The whole carefully revised and edited by RICHARD LOVELAND LOVELAND, of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-Law.

"We look upon this volume as one of the most important and valuable of the unique reprints of Messrs. Stevens and Haynes. Little do we know of the mines of legal wealth that lie buried in the old law books. But a careful examination, either of the reports or of the treatise embodied in the volume now before us, will give the reader some idea of the

good service rendered by Messrs. Stevens & Haynes to the profession. Should occasion arise, the Crown prosecutor as well as counsel for the prisoner will find in this volume a complete vade mecum of the law of high treason and proceedings in relation thereto."-Canada Law Journal.

STEVENS & HAYNES, BELL YARD, TEMPLE BAR.

Stevens and Haynes' Series of Reprints of the Early Reporters.

SIR BARTHOLOMEW SHOWER'S PARLIAMENTARY CASES.

In octavo, 1876, price 4/. 4s., best calf binding,

35

SHOWER'S CASES IN PARLIAMENT

RESOLVED AND ADJUDGED UPON PETITIONS
AND WRITS OF ERROR.

FOURTH

EDITION.

CONTAINING ADDITIONAL CASES NOT HITHERTO REPORTED.

REVISED AND EDITED BY

RICHARD LOVELAND LOVELAND,

Of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-Law;

Editor of "Kelyng's Crown Cases," and "Hall's Essay on the Rights of the Crown in the Seashore."

PUBLISHERS' ADVERTISEMENT.

LIKE the original Editions of the other volumes of Reports which form our series of reprints, this collection of Cases in Parliament by Sir BARTHOLOMEW SHOWER has long been out of print and difficult to obtain. This fact alone would not have decided us to reprint the work, but as Bridgman, in his "Legal Bibliography," writes thus of SHOWER'S Cases in Parliament, "These Cases are learnedly reported, and the arguments of the Counsel, as well as of the Judges, are recorded in a very able manner," and, further, being in possession of some Appeal Cases heard and decided between the years 1726-1733, not hitherto reported in the series of House of Lords Reports, and having the advantage of the editorship of Mr. R. L. LOVELAND, of the Inner Temple, we believed that a new Edition, in the more convenient form of an octavo volume, incorporating the above-named new cases, would be welcomed by the Profession, as well as enable the custodians of all public libraries to complete or add to their series of English Reports; we therefore have produced this Fourth Edition of SHOWER'S Parliamentary Cases, which we commend to the notice of those who possess our new Editions of Bellewe, Cooke, Cunningham, Brooke's New Cases, Choyce Cases in Chancery, Wm. Kelynge, and Kelyng's Crown Cases.

London, May 1876.

Other Volumes are in Progress.

THE PUBLISHERS.

36

STEVENS & HAYNES, BELL YARD, TEMPLE BAR.

THE

Law Magazine and Review.

NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS AND THE PUBLIC. THIS old-established Legal Periodical, the only English Quarterly Review of Jurisprudence, (commenced in 1828,) having passed into the hands of new proprietors, and under new editorship, is now published in its old form, as a Quarterly, in November, February, May, and August, at Five Shillings per number. The first number of the Fourth Series appeared in November, 1875.

A feature of great practical utility in this New Series is

A QUARTERLY DIGEST OF CASES

REPORTED IN THE

Law Reports, Law Journal Reports, Law Times Reports, and the Weekly Reporter. Particular attention is also paid to Foreign and Colonial Jurisprudence, and the Magazine will, as ever, afford its best support to all measures calculated to advance the true interests of Legal Science and of the Profession.

The Number for August 1876, being No. 221, or the Fourth No. of the Fourth Series, contains the following Articles, &c. :—

I. Analytical Jurisprudence. By Mr. JUSTICE MARKBY (Supreme Court, Calcutta).

II. The Examination of Accused Persons. By L. A. GOODEVE, B.A., Barrister-at-Law, late Assistant Secretary to Bengal Government, Legislative Department.

III. The New Science of Law. Part I. By A. P. SPRAGUE, of the U. S. A. Bar.

IV. Restraints on Vexatious Litigation. By ROBERT W. TAYLOR, LL.B., Barrister-at-Law.

V. Law in Portugal.

VI. Select Foreign Cases.

VII. Short Reviews of New Books.

VIII. Quarterly Digest of all Reported Cases.

An Annual Subscription of 20s., paid in advance to the Publishers, will secure the receipt of the LAW MAGAZINE, free by post, within the United Kingdom, or for 24s. to the Colonies and Abroad.

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