Smith john esq (3 Ergebnisse)
Law-Lexicon or Dictionary of Jurisprudence: explaining the technical Words and Phrases embloyed by the several Departments of English Law; including the various Legal Term used in commerciasl Business; together with an Explanatory as well as literal Translation of the Latin Maxims contained in the Writings of the ancient and modern Commentators. Revised and enlarged by J. Shiress WILL.
WHARTON, John Jane Smith (1816/17-1867) - WILL, J. Shiress, Esq., of the Middle Temple, Barrister-At-Law,
Verlag: London, Stevens and sons, 119, Chancery Lane, Law Publishers and Booksellers, 1876. 1876
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The sixth edition. Oktav. XV, 1.029 S. Späterer Leinenband. Das wohl gebräuchlichste Rechtslexikon im anglosächsischen Rechtskreis. Erstmals 1848 in London erschienen gibt es Überarbeitungen und Neuauflagen bis heute; zudem eine Reihe von Reprints. Unerläßlich für jede Bibliothek des anglosächsischen Rechtskreises.

Verlag: Blackbury 1849
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Zustand: Old folds. Reading in part: "Dear Brother I received yours of the 13 yesterday we are injoying tolerable good health ---health is good think her mind is not so steddy as it usd to be she is considered bymost of people to be inbtinely well She does her own work as well as she ever did and is as Careful of her children an…d her things as she ever was but to say that Doctor Mead." Mead ran a private hospital for the insane (see accompanying Reference Report from Chicago Historical Society).
Verlag: London, Saunders and Benning, Law Booksellers, (successors to J. Butterworth and Son) 43, Fleet Street, 1834. 1834
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Anbieter: Vico Verlag und Antiquariat Dr. Otto, Frankfurt am Main, , DeutschlandVico Verlag und Antiquariat Dr. Otto
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Oktav. XLVII, 554 S. Späterer Halbleinenband. First Edition! This work has been received by the Profession with general favor. It is comprehensive, perspicuous, accurate, and methodically arranged, and is a highly valuable exposition of the law upon those subjects contemplated by the author. Die erste Ausgabe erschien in London…1834. Die dritte Ausgabe erschien 1843. This Treatise will be divided into Four Books: a method which appears the simplest and most comprehensive, since it includes, under a few heads, the description of those by whose intervention trade is carried on; of that which they seek to acquire by so employing themselves; of the arrengements which thea are in the habit of adopting, in order to do so effectually: and of the mode in which the proper execution of those arrangements is enforced (The division of th French Code de Commerce is into four books). CONTENTS. Introduction Book I: Of Mercantile Persons Book II: Of Mercantile Property Book III: Of Mercantile Contracts Book IV: Of Mercantile Remedies. Appendix of Statutes John William Smith (18091845) was an English barrister, known as a legal writer. Born in Chapel Street, Belgrave Square, London, on 23 January 1809, he was eldest son of John Smith, who was appointed in 1830 paymaster of the forces in Ireland; his mother was a sister of George Connor, master in chancery in Ireland. After a private school in Isleworth, he went in 1821 to Westminster School, where he was elected queen's scholar in 1823. He entered in 1826 Trinity College, Dublin, where he obtained a scholarship in 1829, and was awarded the gold medal in classics in the following year.[1] Smith joined on 20 June 1827 the Inner Temple, where, after practising for some years as a special pleader, he was called to the bar on 3 May 1834. From 1837 to 1843 he was lecturer at the Law Institution, and in 1840 was appointed to a revising barristership. He practised for a time on the Oxford circuit and at the Hereford and Gloucester sessions, but later only in London.[1] Smith died of consumption on 17 December 1845. He was buried in Kensal Green cemetery, and a tablet was placed to his memory in the Temple Church.[1] Compendium of Mercantile Law, 1834, London, with a third edition in its author's lifetime, later editions by George Morley Dowdeswell in 1848, 1855, 1871, and 1877, and by John Macdonell and George Humphreys in 1890.