INDEX

Note: Page references in italics refer to illustrations or captions. All locations are in Massachusetts unless otherwise indicated. JQ refers to Josiah Quincy Jr.

Un Abridgment Des Plusieurs Cases (Rolle), 15–16, 92

See also Preface to Rolle’s Abridgement

Abridgment of the First Part of Coke’s Institutes (Hawkins), 92, 93n.1, 124n.4, 197n.6, 334

accidental hurts, 231, 231n.1

accord, 74, 103–5, 103n.1, 105, 105n.3, 113, 114n.4, 115n.2, 295

account, 74, 295

action, 74, 295

See also under Latin Maxims

Act of 15 Car. 2, 70–71, 72

Adams, Charles Francis, 76–77 (table)

Adams, John

on Blackstone’s Analysis of the Laws of England, 27n.46

on Blackstone’s Commentaries, 226n.2

“Commonplace Book,” 6n.8, 17

Diary and Autobiography of John Adams, 5, 15

and Gridley, 10, 16n.29, 27, 31–32

on Hale’s Preface to Rolle’s Abridgement, 93n.9

legal education of, 3, 16n.29, 234n

on maxims, 35

on natural law, 63–64

on Otis, 36n.74

Roman law studied by, 11n.19, 31

and Thacher, 21n.42, 27

Van Muyden’s Compendiosa Institutionum Justiniani Tractatio owned by, 322

Adams v. Staley, 287, 288n.15

administrators/administratrix/executors.

See execors/co-execors

Admiralty proceedings, 10–11, 11n.19, 168n.6

“Advice to a Student of the Common Law” (Hale), 16n.29, 27, 31, 32, 93n.9

Advice to His Nephew in the Study of Common Law (T. Reeve), 32

advowsons, 213n.6

Against the Inhabitants of the Hundred, 110n.7

Alexander, James, 4n.4

Almon, John: Parliamentary Register, 184n

Amar, Akhil Reed, 61n.191

ambiguity. See under Latin Maxims

Ames, James Barr, 28

Amiconi, Giacomo, 90

Analysis of the Law (Hale), 16n.29

Analysis of the Laws of England (Blackstone), 27n.46, 42, 66–67, 88n.13, 102n.2

An Analysis of the Roman Civil Law (Hallifax), 33n.65

Anderson’s Reports, 168n.3

Andrews v. Franklin, 187n.2

Angier v. Jackson, 60–61, 239–40n.4

aphoristic pedagogy. See maxims

appraisement- vs. jury-determined value, 269, 295

apprentices and servants, 106–9

assault in defense of master, 109, 110–11n.14

as a Boston underclass, 107–8n.1

de facto, 106

Dunten v. Richards, 52

enticed/hired away, 109

fraud of, 109, 110n.13

illness of, 107

marriage/children of, 53, 106, 107

after master’s death, 53–54, 107, 108n.4, 109

release from master to, 109, 111n.15

rights of, 52–54, 107

robbery of, 109, 110n.6

trover against master on delivery to, 109, 110n.12

wages of, 106, 106n.5, 107, 109

writing as basis of apprenticeship, 53, 107, 108n.3

apprentices/apprenticeship, legal

genealogy of, 76–77 (table)

institutional records of, 6–7n

vs. lectures, 7–8, 20

negative aspects of, 4–5nn.4–5

as a pedagogy, 4–5, 4n.4, 6, 11, 21

arbitrament/arbitrors/awards, 74

and accord, 103n.1, 105, 113, 115n.2

authority/competence of arbitrators, 132

award revocation due to marriage, 259, 260nn.8–10

awards tendered but refused, 273, 299

and compromise, 114n.10

debts upon bonds for awards to infants, 283

importance of law on, 126n.1

meaning of arbitrament, 97n

release of actions after submission of, 297

submission to arbitration, 113, 115, 116n.4, 297

tender/refusal as payment, 116nn.6–7

types of cases, 113

Argent v. Darrel, 264n.1

arrest, 74, 289, 293, 294n.5, 295

arrest of judgment, 271, 272n.7, 288n.6, 295, 303

arrest without touch, 275, 295

The Art of Memory (Yates), 323

Ashley v. Ashley, 240n.9

Ashmun, John, 7

Ashton v. Blagrove, 252, 253n.8

Ashton v. Jennings, 279, 280n.4

assignors/assignees, 295, 297

assise, 289, 289n.3

assumpsit, 47, 74, 131, 191, 250, 250n.1, 297, 303

See also indebitatus assumpsit

Athenian law, 58

attachment, 74, 102

attaint, 56n.175, 60, 60n.189, 146, 147n.6, 160n.6, 161

Auchmuty, Robert, 58–59, 60, 70, 71, 241–42n.3, 325

auter droit (in the right of another), 125, 126n.4

authority of record vs. in law, 275, 297

authority to act, 285

a valore maritagii (on account of marriage), 125, 126n.5

awards. See arbitrament/arbitrors/awards

Bacon, Francis

of aphorisms, 332

A Collection of Some Principal Rules and Maxims of the Common Lawes, 33, 323, 334

The Elements of the Common Law, 388

The Essays or Counsels Civill and Morall, 318

influence of, 182n.4, 185n.2

jurisprudence of, 185n.2

on maxims/commonplacing, 9, 34–36, 36n.74

“Of Judicature,” 171n.7

on the rational arts, 9

Bacon, Matthew: New Abridgment of the Law, 112n.4, 138n.5, 147n.6, 236n.7, 260n.9, 260n.11, 260n.13

Bailee v. Vivash, 232n.6

bailiff finding outward door open, then breaking inner doors, 293, 294n.5, 297, 305

bailment, 112, 112n.4, 279, 297

Baker’s Case, 171n.5, 223, 223n.1

Baker v. Frobisher, 41n.88

Baker v. Mattocks, 22n

Banister v. Cunningham, 13, 22, 233, 234n, 235

Banister v. Henderson, 13, 22, 40n.86, 51, 234n, 325

Barber v. Dennis, 106, 106nn.4–5

Barfoot v. Reynolds, 110–11n.14

Barnardiston’s King’s Bench Reports, 47, 236n.4, 250, 251n.9

Baron, B., 90

Baron and Feme, 39, 43, 44, 117–25, 117n.1

age of, and husband as attorney for her, 263, 264n.3, 297

bonds not extinguished upon marriage, 119, 120n.2

chattel personal gained by husband, 121, 122n.3

chattel real gained by husband, 121, 123, 125

detinue against husband and wife, 293, 294n.6, 297

estate gained by husband, 119, 120nn.3–4

evidentiary privilege of, 45

felony of husband, 121, 122n.1, 315, 316nn.1–2

and forced marriage, 45, 48, 117, 118n.4

importance of law on, 126n.1

and jointure, 119, 120n.1

and leases, 119, 120n.6, 121

meaning of terms, 117n.1

as one legal personality, 124n.4, 280n.3

promise to a wife in consideration of her curing a wound, 250, 297

sale of wife, 297

wife beaten by husband, 119

wife finds goods, 297

wife’s debts after her death, husband liable for, 297

wife’s debts brought into marriage, 123, 124n.2

wife’s gambling losses, 117, 118n.5

wife’s involvement in trade/contracts, 46–47, 117, 119, 130, 131n.3, 131nn.5–6

wife’s possessions held for another, 125, 126n.4

wife’s right to necessities, 47–48, 49–50, 130, 131n.10

as witnesses for/against each other, 117

See also marriage

barratry, 143, 143n.1, 143n.3, 145, 145n.2

Barrington, Daines: Observations upon the Statutes, 172n.2

Barton, J. L., 26–27n.46

base possession by a wife, 43

Baspole’s Case, 114n.11

bastard child, reputed father of, 241, 242n.6

Bathurst, H.: Theory of Evidence, 138n.6

battery, 74, 281, 297

Baynham v. Matthews, 263, 264n.2

Bearbrook v. Read, 253n.11

Beardesley v. Baldwin, 187n.3

Beccaria, Cesare Bonesana, Marchese de, 68

Dei Delitti e delle Pene (Crimes and Punishments), 186n.3, 227–28n.2, 229n.1

Beck, Karen, 6–7n

Bedell v. Constable, 67–68, 224n.5

Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (Yale University), 6n

Bennet v. Hundred of Hartford, 159, 159n.2

Benwick (Scottish border), 95

Bilder, Mary Sarah, 39, 43

bills of exchange. See notes/bills of exchange

Bishop v. Brig Freemason, 70–72

Blackamore’s Case, 285, 286n.2

Blackborough v. Davies, 244n.4

Blackstone, Sir William

Analysis of the Laws of England, 27n.46, 42, 66–67, 88n.13, 102n.2

common law lectures at Oxford, 19

on common law precedent, 41, 42

influence of, 19n.35

on legislation vs. judicial decisions, 41, 42, 42n.95

pedagogical enemies of, 19n.35

Vinerian Chair held by, 102n.2

See also Commentaries on the Laws of England

Blake’s Case, 105nn.2–3, 115n.2

Bland v. Inman, 257, 258n.9

Blythe v. Hill, 254n.11

Bohun, William: Institutio Legalis, 89, 91n.6

Bole v. Horton, 224n.6

bona notibilia, 295, 296n.3

bonds

agreement to, 255, 256nn.11–12

for awards to infants, debts upon, 283

of children, 289, 290n.12, 291

manner of payment of, 255

mistaken dates of, 255, 256n.9

names in, 245

not extinguished upon marriage, 119, 120n.2

against past vs. future escapes, 281

of twenty years standing, 279, 280n.5, 303

See also accord

Boston College Law School Rare Books Room, 6n

Boston Massacre Cases, 62, 72–73

bottomry. See hypothecation

Bounds Law Library (University of Alabama School of Law), 6n

Bowyer v. Bampton, 190n.6

Boyfield v. Brown, 143n.2

Bracton, Henry de: De Legibus et Consuetudinibus Angliae, 65n.208, 404

Brashford v. Buckingham and his wife, 46–47, 250, 251nn.8–9

Bridgeman’s Case, 266n.8

bridges, 231, 232n.4, 279

Brief Treatise of Testaments and Last Wills (Swinburne), 239, 240n.13, 269, 270n.4

Bromfield v. Little, 41n.87

Bromley v. Frazier, 189n.3

Brooke, Sir Robert: La Graunde Abridgment, 162n.6

Brownlow and Goldesborough Reports, 253n.11

Brunkhornes Case, 114n.7

Bryson, W. Hamilton, 5n.6

Buckler’s Case, 206n.4

Buckley v. Guildbank, 257, 258n.2

Buck v. Barnard, 263, 264n.4

Burlamaqui, Jean Jacques, 63

Principes du droit naturel, 181–82n.2

Burn, Richard: The Ecclesiastical Law, 66

Burrow’s Reports, 130n, 131n.5, 131n.10, 266n.3

Bushel’s Case, 161n.2

Butler and Baker’s Case, 223, 223n.1, 262n.8

Cage v. Acton, 119, 120n.2

Calvin’s Case, 40, 42n.95

Campbell v. Bordieis, 145n.3

capital punishment/torture, 186n.3

Carter v. Sheppard, 248, 248n.1

Carthew’s Reports, 246n.12, 262n.10, 262nn.12–13, 264n.1

Case of the Marshalsea, 275, 276n.6, 381, 381n.1

Cases in Chancery, 168n.5

categorical imperatives, 365n.1

Catesby’s Case, 257, 258n.3

Catholic Church, 96n.1

chancery judges, 116n.5

Chardon, Peter, 15

Charter (1689), 40, 41n.87, 43, 62

chattel

personal, 121, 165

real, 121, 122n.3, 123, 125

Chemerinsky, Erwin, 61n.191

Chichester v. Phillips, 161, 162n.4

children

of apprentices and servants, 53

debts upon bonds for awards to

infants, 283

executor’s administration of an infant, 277

guardians of underage heirs/infants, 265, 266n.6, 289, 290n.8, 290n.10, 301

infant, definition of, 290n.11

infant executors, 295, 296n.6

infants’ debts/bonds, 289, 290n.12, 291

legal minority vs. majority of, 277

responsibility for, 38

stillborn, of unmarried women, 50–51

suits on behalf of infants, 257, 289, 290n.8, 290n.10, 301

choses in action, 121, 205, 293, 293n.2

Chroust, Anton-Hermann, 4n.4

civil law

in Admirality Courts, 168n.6

vs. common law, 168n.6

definition of, 181

guides to, 33n.65

and Latin Maxims, 10–11, 31–33

on legacies, 167, 169

maxim sources in, 31–33, 34–35

See also Roman law

Civil Law in its Natural Order (Domat), 33n.65, 169n.1

Civil War, 8

Clark v. Dealy, 134n.4

Clark v. Mundal, 254n.11

Cloud v. Nicholson, 252, 253n.6

Coke, Sir Edward

Calvin’s Case, 40, 42n.95

on the importance of laws, 183, 185

influence of, 194

on knowledge by persons from the neighborhood of a case, 161n.2

legal career/stature of, 194

Three Law Tracts, 394

Coke on Littleton

on acts of Parliament, citing, 256n.5

on a claim within view as reducing a freehold in law to a possession, 288n.5

on condition for payment of money, 293–94n.3

on curtesy, 313–14nn.7–9

on the death of a wounded man, 251n.4

on deeds, premises of, 309, 310n.5

on demurrers, 199n.2

difficulty of studying, 27, 29

on dower, 317, 317n.1, 317n.5

editions of, 88n.12, 91n.11

on executions, release of, 210n.1

on fee simple, 311n.9

on goods delivered for safe keeping, later stolen, 276n.3

on guardians of underage heirs/infants, 290n.10

on husband and wife as one legal personality, 280n.3

on a husband attainted of felony, 316nn.1–2

importance of, 91n.9

on infants’ debts/bonds, 290n.12

on inheritance, 154n.6, 155n.1

on joint tenants, 311n.9, 317n.1

on juries’ legal knowledge, 147n.2

on knowledge of law, 82, 82nn.2–3

on leases/lessors, 163–64nn.3–4

maxims in, 31

on maxims vs. principles/rules/postulates/axioms, 333

on misnomer pleas, 258n.7

on obligation to seek payment, and obligee’s being in England, 271n

on occupancy of lands, 152n.3

on pleading, 197n.9, 197nn.4–5, 200n.1

on preambles of statutes, 219n

proofs/arguments from common law, 85, 87

proofs/arguments from statutes, 87

on property in personal goods vs. bare possession, 293, 294n.8

on the purpose of trials, 193n.4, 195n.4

on release of men bound jointly, 250n.2

on releases, 202n.7, 204n.8, 208n.6, 210n.1, 210n.3, 210nn.5–6, 213n.6, 311n.12

and seisin, 316n.4

on sources of common law, 333, 333n.43

on special pleading, 264n.6

“star”pagination of, 88n.12

See also Abridgment of the First Part of Coke’s Institutes

Coke’s Institutes, 31, 194, 220n.4, 222nn.5–6, 328, 332, 333–34, 372, 412, 425

Coke’s Reports, 29, 31

Baker’s Case, 171n.5, 223, 223n.1

Baspole’s Case, 114n.11

Blackamore’s Case, 285, 286n.2

Blake’s Case, 105nn.2–3, 115n.2

Buckler’s Case, 206n.4

Butler and Baker’s Case, 223, 223n.1, 262n.8

Case of the Marshalsea, 275, 276n.6, 381, 381n.1

Catesby’s Case, 257, 258n.3

Countess of Shrewburies Case, 109, 110n.3

Doctor Leyfield’s Case, 148n.4, 198n

Dr. Bonham’s Case, 67, 67n.219

Edward Altham’s Case, 210n.6, 210nn.1–3, 212–13nn.1–2

footnotes, 328n.15

format of, 328–29

Forse and Hembling’s Case, 261–62n.1

Goddard’s Case, 255, 256n.9

Hensloe’s Case, 204n.5

Heydon’s Case, 66

Higgins Case, 104n.3

Hoe’s Case, 206n.4, 213n.2, 259, 260n.3

index of maxims, 328

Lampet’s Case, 206n.4

Lord Cheyneys Case, 135, 135n.2

Pawlet Marquis of Winchester’s Case, 240n.14

publication of, 81n.2, 398

on reading without hearing/conference/meditation/recordation, 84n.1

Rigeway’s Case, 265, 266n.9

Russel’s Case, 204n.3

Sir Hugh Cholmley’s Case, 206n.4

Sir Richard Pexhall’s Case, 289, 290n.6

Slade’s Case, 188n.10

Vernon’s Case, 104n.3

Vynior’s Case, 115n.1

on the welfare of the people, 81, 81n.2

Westby’s Case, 248, 249n.9

Whelpdale’s Case, 197n.4, 255, 256n.11, 277–78n.1

See also Latin Maxims, maxim topics

A Collection of Some Principal Rules and Maxims of the Common Lawes (F. Bacon), 33, 323, 334

College of William and Mary (Williamsburg, Va.), 3, 3n.3, 19–20

Collins v. Butler, 189n.1

colloquium, 252, 253n.7

Colt and Glover v. Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, 227n.1

Comberbach’s Reports

Cromwell v. Grimsdale, 245, 246n.3

JQ influenced by, 283–84n.1

Martin v. Crump, 112n.1

Rex v. Abraham, 245, 246n.9

Rex v. Hains, 137n.2

Short v. Maynard, 245, 246n.11

Commentaries on the Laws of England (Blackstone)

on attaint, 60

influence/success of, 19, 29, 33n.65, 102n.2, 225–26n.2

JQ’s familiarity with/access to, 20n.37, 42, 102n.2, 225–26n.2

politics of, 19n.35

publication of, 19, 27n.46, 88n.13, 225n.2

size of, 102n.2

theoretical style of, 19n.35, 37

Commentaries or Reports (Plowden), 29, 61, 160n.7, 220n.2, 222n.7, 332, 367n.1

common law

and acts of Parliament, 67n.219, 95

as the art of procuring redress, 94

authorities/writings on, 31 (see also specific writings)

as a body of legal doctrine, 41

vs. civil law, 168n.6

vs. colonial law, 39–40, 39n.81, 62

countries subject to, 95

customs as a ground of, 95

and equity, 87, 96n.1, 183

Equity of the Statute, 66–67

grounds of, 95

interpreting a law, 87

judges’ obligation to determine cases according to, 183

law of God as a ground of, 95

law of reason as a ground of, 95

legal education in, 19, 28–30

maxims as a ground of, 33, 34–36, 95

(see also under Latin Maxims)

perseverance by students of, 84, 84n.1

and power of juries (see Seventh Amendment)

as precedent, 41, 42, 43

proofs/arguments from, 85, 87

as a rule of action, 94

security produced by, 81, 81n.3

as source of legal authority and power, 39–42, 39n.81, 40nn.85–86

vs. statute law, 42, 42n.95

statutes/acts as altering, 67–68, 223

studying history of, 82

texts for studying, 82–85, 82nn.2–3, 89, 92–95

“Commonplace Book” (Adams), 6n.8, 17

commonplace books

difficulties of writing, 25–26

Hale on, 37n.78

Law Commonplace Book (see Law Commonplace Book)

maxims in, 9 (see also Latin Maxims)

methods of constructing, 15–16

(see also “A New Method of a Common-place book”; Preface to Rolle’s Abridgement)

purpose of, 37

See also under legal education

commonplace collections, 6–7n

Compendiosa institutionum Justiniana tractatiae (Vinnius), 32n.64

Compendiosa Institutionum Justiniani Tractatio (Van Muyden), 32n.64, 322

compromise, 114n.10

conditions, diversity in performance of, 291–93, 293–94nn.1–3, 299

consideration, definition of, 282n.9

Considerations on Criminal Law (Dagge), 57, 172, 172n.1

contempt, definition of, 299

contracts

by accord, 74

to deliver goods, 103, 105

indebitatus assumpsit action, 134, 134n.3, 188nn.10–11, 252, 253n.9, 287

money payed in satisfaction of, 103, 105

nil debit plea re, 191

verbal, 105

See also under Latin Maxims

Cooke v. Colehan, 187n.4

coparcenage, 43, 155, 155n.3

Coquillette, Daniel R., 61n.191

Corpus Juris Civilis (Justinian), 353

Countess of Shrewburies Case, 109, 110n.3

The Countrey Justice (Dalton), 53, 108n.3, 403n.8

Court of Requests, 168n.6

Coventry v. Woodhall, 108n.2

coverture, definition of, 278n.7

Cox, Kevin Willoughby, 76–77 (table)

Cox Chart to Quincy manuscripts at Massachusetts Historical Society, 429–37

crammers, 7

Creator, idea of, 179

credit card late fees, 246n.4

crime. See under Latin Maxims

Crimes and Punishments (Beccaria), 186n.3, 227–28n.2, 229n.1

criminal thought, 186n.3

Croke’s Reports, 256n.1

Against the Inhabitants of the Hundred, 110n.7

Bland v. Inman, 257, 258n.9

Brashford v. Buckingham and his wife, 46–47, 250, 251nn.8–9

Brunkhornes Case, 114n.7

Buckley v. Guildbank, 257, 258n.2

Clark v. Cogge, 256n.1

Green’s Case, 110n.6

Hearn v. Allen, 235–36n.3

Henry Peytoes Case, 104n.3, 104n.5, 105n.2, 114n.4

Lovelace v. Crockett, 254n.11

Middleton v. Baker, 171nn.5–6

Mustard v. Hoppey, 250, 250n.1

Noyes v. Hopgood, 254n.11

Prescot’s Case, 257, 258n.1

Queen v. Ingersall, 147n.5

Reymond v. Hundred de Okins, 110n.7

Sower v. Bradfield, 114n.7

Tampion v. Newson and Bridget his Wife, 131n.3

Tracy v. Veal, 110n.9

Watson v. Thorpe and his Wife, 131n.3

Cromwell v. Grimsdale, 245, 246n.3

Crosse v. Bilson, 257, 258n.10

Cumber v. Wane, 253n.11, 293, 293n.1

Cunningham, T.: The Law of Bills of Exchange, 189n.2

curiosity as a source of knowledge, 81, 81n.3

curiosity produced by security, 81, 81n.3

Curson, Henry: A Supplement to the Office and Duty of Executors, 92

curtesy, 316n.2

definition of, 118n.2, 313n.6

and marriage, 48, 316n.2

tenants made by, 127, 313–14nn.7–9, 315, 316n.2

Cushing, John, 49, 59

customs as a ground of common law, 95

See also under Latin Maxims

Dagge, H.: Considerations on Criminal Law, 57, 172, 172n.1

Dalton, Michael: The Countrey Justice, 53, 108n.3, 403n.8

Dane, Nathan, 7

D’Anvers, Knightly: General Abridgment of the Common Law, 267, 268n.7

Dean v. Dicker, 144n.10

Dearly v. Duchess of Nazarene, 131n.7

death of a wounded man, 250, 251n.4, 300

Debates of the House of Commons (Grey), 57, 176n

de bonis propriis liability, 273, 274n.6, 283, 284n.9

de bonis testatoris liability, 273, 274n.6, 283, 284n.9, 295

debts

application of debtor’s payment to debts as creditor wishes, 252, 303

award revocation due to marriage, 259, 260nn.8–10, 297, 298n.8

of children, 289, 290n.12, 291

condition for payment of money, 291–93, 293–94nn.1–3

date of payment of, 257, 258nn.1–2

debtors as witnesses, 134, 134n.4

land for payment of, 295

notes as not discharging, 252, 253–54n.11

obligation to seek payment, and obligee’s being in England, 269, 271, 271n, 303

one man submitting for another’s, 287, 288n.15, 307, 308n.4

and payment of rent, 267

personal estate as payment of, 269, 270n.8, 300

raised by a will, 261

release of, 207, 209, 305

rent covered by, 305, 306n.16

and revocation of grants, 243, 244nn.3–4

upon bonds for awards to infants, 283

upon judgment in trespass for damages, 250, 251n.10

upon obligations, 279

wife’s brought into marriage, 123, 124n.2

of wives vs. husbands, 48–50

See also bonds; indebitatus assumpsit

declaration consistent with itself, 300

deeds

alteration of, 56–57, 58–59

contracts without, 103, 105

date of, 256n.9, 303, 309, 310n.5

with a date/place, pleading of, 248, 249n.4

indented vs. poll, 133, 133n.4, 163n.3, 193, 193n.1

non est factum plea re, 255, 256n.8, 261, 262n.8, 275, 276n.10, 287, 303

and obligations, 74, 103, 105, 105n.1, 303, 304n.5

premises of, 309, 310nn.4–5

refused by the donee, 261, 262n.3

See also under Latin Maxims

De Legibus et Consuetudinibus Angliae (Bracton), 65n.208, 404

demurrers

consent required for, 161, 162n.8, 170n.2

definition of, 253n.10

re notes as discharging debts, 252

paintiff required to join in, 170, 171n.5

repleaders after, 265, 266n.9, 305

rules re, 198–99nn.1–2, 198–200

Derumple v. Clark, 69

descent. See under inheritance; lands/tenements/hereditaments

detinue, 49n.132, 260n.12, 293, 294n.6, 297, 298n.11

Diary and Autobiography of John Adams (Adams), 5, 15

Dickins, Francis, 331

as Civil Law professor at Cambridge, 10, 32n.63

Martial quoted by, 91n.8

Method of Studying the Civil Law, 27, 31, 32, 32n.65

on Roman law, 10

Dick v. Barsell, 144n.8

Digest (Justinian), 31, 328, 331, 340n.3

See also Latin Maxims, maxim topics

dignities, 153, 154n.7

A Direction or Preparative to the Study of the Lawe (Fulbeck), 33n.66

Directions to his Nephew. See “To his Nephew, Directions for beginning the Study of Law”

disseisin

disseisee, definition of, 260n.4, 300n.4

disseisor, definition of, 202n.11, 260n.4, 290n.4

extinguishment of dissisee’s right to land, 259, 260nn.4–5, 300

of joint tenants, 289, 305

of a man who cann’t enter/manure his land, 421n.12

nul disseisin plea, 191

releases to disseisors, 201, 202n.11, 305, 310, 311n.12

of a rent, 378–379n.9

Doctor and Student (St. German), 33n.66, 92, 95–96n.1, 371n.4, 392

Doctor Leyfield’s Case, 148n.4, 198n

Doctors’ Commons (London), 168n.6

documents, alteration of, 56–57, 58–59

Dodderidge, John, 332–33

The Lawyer’s Light, 33–34

Dod v. Monger, 281, 282n.4

Dom. Rex v. Mangent, 50–51

Domat, Jean: Civil Law in its Natural Order, 33n.65, 169n.1

Dominus Rex v. Bennett, 147n.2

dower

according to improved value of the land, 317

pleas re, 191

and seisen, 315

and tenants in common, 317, 317n.5

to widows, 48, 120n.1

and wills, 317

Dr. Bonham’s Case, 67, 67n.219

drain spouts, 231, 231n.2

Drope v. Thaire, 109

Dudley v. Dudley, 40–41n.87

Duke of Norfolk v. Howard, 262n.11

Duncombe, George: Trials Per Pais, 159, 159n.2, 162n.5, 280n.5

Dunten v. Richards, 52

Dusten v. Richards, 107–8n.1

Earl of Banbury v. Wood, 243, 244n.3

The Ecclesiastical Law (Burn), 66

education, rational arts as basis of, 9

Edward Altham’s Case, 210n.6, 210nn.1–3, 212–13nn.1–2

ejectment, 103

The Elements of the Common Law (F. Bacon), 388

Eliot, Charles, 8

elocution, 9

Elton v. Brogden, 145n.2

England, territory/civil division of, 95

English common law. See common law

The Englishman’s Right (Hawles), 148, 149n.9, 150, 150n.2

Enlightenment thought, 63

See also natural law

Entick v. Carrington, 68, 229n.2

equality, 310, 313n.1

equity

and common law, 87, 96n.1, 183

and juries, 55, 55n.164

of statutes/acts, 66–67, 215, 222n.7

Equity Commonplace Book (Jefferson), 6n

equity courts, 96n.1

Equity of the Statute, 66–67

error. See under Latin Maxims

escrow, 287, 288n.9, 305

Esher, Lord, 333

L’Esprit des Lois (Montesquieu), 62–63, 64, 177n.2

The Essays or Counsels Civill and Morall (F. Bacon), 318

estates, 74

chattels, 127, 129

entailed (see male entail)

express limitation by testator, 269, 300

forfeitability of, 127

and gender, 43, 44n.106, 48

husband’s administration of wife’s, 277, 295

inherited, 44n.106, 127, 129

for payment of debts, 295

personal, as payment of debts, 269, 270n.8, 300

pleading re, 196

releases to, 201, 202nn.7–9, 203, 212, 214n.7

and remainder men, 236n.6, 265, 266n.1, 307, 308n.13

transfer of, 127

types of, 127, 129

See also curtesy; freehold

estoppels, 133, 133n.4, 193, 262n.3, 300

Euer, Samson: Trials Per Pais, 415n.4

evidence, 134–40

and ambiguity of words/deeds, 138n.6

copies of originals as, 137

to a court vs. a jury, 135

and debtors as witnesses, 134, 134n.4

evidentiary privilege, 45

general rules of, 137, 139

giving a special matter in, 196, 197n.9, 197nn.4–7

and hearsay, 139

indebitatus assumpsit, 134, 134n.3

and perjury/fraud, 134, 135

and pleading, 305, 305n, 306n.5 (see also pleading)

of promise of marriage, 134

remainder men as witnesses, 265, 307

time and place of, 287, 288n.4

witnesses in suits involving them, 263, 264n.7, 307

witnesses’ verbatim testimony, 135

See also demurrers; pleading

examination/judgment’s role in education, 9

exceptions. See under Latin Maxims

Exchequer Chamber, 46, 116n.5, 198n, 250, 251nn.6–7

execors/co-execors (executors/coexecutors), 141, 142n.3, 165

in actions in their own name, 283, 307

administration of an infant by, 277

as assignees, 295

covenants broken by, 283, 284n.9, 295

infants as, 295, 296n.6

joint, pleading severally, 269

land possessed by, 295

liability for testator’s goods if sued, 273, 274n.6

plene administravit plea by, 295

releases by, 203, 204n.5, 204n.7

and value on appraisement, 295

execution sued after death of defendant, 300

extinguishment of dissisee’s right, 300

Eyston v. Studd, 220n.2

Fawcet v. Beavres, 110n.11

Federalists, 7

fee simple

vs. cut down, 265–66n.1

and entail, 154n.9, 265–66n.1

by granting lands, 129, 309, 310, 311n.7, 312

by granting rent, 312

vs. lands received by descent, 153

by lineal ascent, 151, 156n

pleading re, 196

and seisen, 299n.4

and tenancy for life, 319

without “his heirs,” 309, 310, 311n.7, 311n.9, 312

Feke, Robert, 2

felony in death of a wounded man, 250, 251n.4, 300

Feltham v. Executors Harlston, 269, 270n.8

feme sole, 123, 125, 131n.6, 260n.9, 297, 300, 300n.3

Finch, Henry

Law: or, Discourse thereof, 92, 93n.8

Nomotechnia, 33n.66

fines, civil actions against persons in execution for, 255

Fitch, Samuel 58

Fitz-Gibbons’ Reports, 264n.2

Fitzherbert, Anthony

La Graunde Abridgment, 141n.2

The New Natura Brevium, 110n.10, 363n.12, 377n.7, 401n.1, 415n.1

fornication laws, 242n.6

Forse and Hembling’s Case, 261–62n.1

Foster v. Wilmer, 144n.9

Franunce, Abraham: The Lawyiers Logick, 33n.66

fraud

of apprentices/servants, 109, 110n.13

in conveyance of land, 281, 300

and evidence, 134, 135

examined in civil law, 354, 355, 355n.5

insurance, 143, 143n.1, 143n.3

purged, 300

Statute of Frauds, 135–36n.3

See also perjury

free blacks, 52, 52n.151

freehold, 74, 129

arbitrament/award re, 113

in futoro, 206n.4

husband’s gain of, 119, 120n.4, 122n.1

reduced to a possession by claim within view, 287, 288n.5, 301

release of right to, 203, 204n.8, 205, 206n.4, 212, 214n

right to, and acceptance of collateral satisfaction, 103

several, 306n.16

types of estates of, 127

See also seisin

Friedman, Lawrence M., 4n.4

frithing (a land division), 95, 96n.2

Frowicke’s Case, 161–62n.3

Fulbeck, William: A Direction or Preparative to the Study of the Lawe, 33n.66

Fuller, Lon, 69

funeral expenses, 265, 295

Garret v. Johnson, 287, 288n.4

Gasperini v. Center for Humanities, 61n.191

Gavelkind, 312

gender, 43–51

and inheritance, 43–44, 48, 51

and land brought into marriage by the wife, 44, 48

marital subordination of women, 44, 45–48

wives’ involvement in trade/contracts, 45–47

See also Baron and Feme; marriage

General Abridgment of Cases in Equity, 166n.4

General Abridgment of the Common Law (D’Anvers), 267, 268n.7

A General Abridgment of the Law and Equity (Viner), 30, 102n.2, 106nn.1–5, 148n.3

God’s law as a ground of common law, 95

goldsmiths as bankers, 245, 255, 256n.2

goods delivered for safe keeping, later stolen, 275, 276n.3

goods’ disappearance between arrival and inspection, 243, 243n

Gordon v. Morley, 145n.3

Gore, Christopher, 76–77 (table)

Grammer et al. v. Nixon, 110n.13

grants, revocation of, 243, 244nn.3–4

La Graunde Abridgment (Brooke), 162n.6

La Graunde Abridgment (Fitzherbert), 141n.2

Gray’s Inn (London), 33n.66

Green’s Case, 110n.6

Green v. Brown, 144n.5

Grey, Anchitell: Debates of the House of Commons, 57, 176n

Gridley, Jeremy

John Adams taught by, 16n.29

apprenticeships following, 76–77 (table)

on auhority, 325

law library of, 102n.2

on legal authority, 40n.86, 58

maxims used by, 35

on the Stamp Act, 35

Van Muyden’s Compendiosa Institutionum Justiniani Tractatio owned by, 322

See also Banister v. Henderson

Guillan v. Gill, 142n.7

gun accidents, 231, 231nn.1–2

Hale, Sir Matthew

“Advice to a Student of the Common Law,” 16n.29, 27, 31, 32, 93n.9

Analysis of the Law, 16n.29

as Chief Justice, 286n.5

History of the Common Law, 92, 93n.6, 286n.5

JQ influenced by, 285, 286n.5

legal stature of, 24

on maxims/commonplacing, 9

“Method for studying the Common Law,” 22

Summary of the Pleas of the Crown (Historia Placitorum Coronae), 24, 286n.5

theory of legal education, 25–26

See also Preface to Rolle’s Abridgement

Hallifax, Samuel: An Analysis of the Roman Civil Law, 33n.65

Hanlon, Mark, 49

Hanlon, Mary, 49

Hanlon v. Thayer (“naked wife” case), 40n.85, 49–50, 49n.132

Harrison’s Case, 363n.13

Harvard College Library, 439–44, 439n

Harvard Law School, 7–8, 7n.11, 20, 28

Harvard Medical Institution, 5n.7

Harvey v. Broad, 257, 258n.11

Havens, Earle, 6n

Hawkins, William

Abridgment of the First Part of Coke’s Institutes, 92, 93n.1, 124n.4, 197n.6, 334

on the Magna Carta, 223–24n.3

Pleas of the Crown, 29, 92, 93n.7, 134n.5, 223–24n.3, 246n.10

Hawkins v. Cordy, 245, 246n.12

Hawles, Sir John: The Englishman’s Right, 148, 149n.9, 150, 150n.2

Hearn v. Allen, 235–36n.3

Heineccius, Johann Gottlieb, 32n.64

heirs. See inheritance

Henry, Patrick, 3–4n.3

Henry Peytoes Case, 104n.3, 104n.5, 105n.2, 114n.4

Henry VII, king of England, 45

Henry VIII, king of England, 96n.1

Hensloe’s Case, 204n.5

Hervey, Thomas, 131n.10

Heydon’s Case, 66

Higgins Case, 104n.3

hiis testibus clause, 309, 310n.5

The History of England (Macaulay), 56, 56n.172, 159, 160n.5

History of Great Britain (Hume), 134n.6, 146, 147nn.8–9

History of the Common Law (Hale), 92, 93n.6, 286n.5

Hoar v. Dacosta, 188n.9

Hobart’s Reports, 369n.4

Bridgeman’s Case, 266n.8

Colt and Glover v. Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, 227n.1

Coventry v. Woodhall, 108n.2

on judges’ authority, 68

Lovelace v. Cocket, 253n.11

Needler v. Bishop of Winchester, 260n.11

Oates v. Frith, 286n.6

St. John v. Diggs, 268n.3

Weaver v. Ward, 277, 278n.10

Hobbes, Thomas

Francis Bacon’s influence on, 182n.4

De Civi, 64, 182n.4

enemies of, 182n.4

on natural law, 64, 181

Hoeflich, M. H., 4n.4, 31n

Hoe’s Case, 206n.4, 213n.2, 259, 260n.3

Hohfeld, Wesley Newcomb, 56

Holland, 357

Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Jr., 8

Holt, Sir John

as Chief Justice, 294n.4

on copies of originals as evidence, 137

on debtors as witnesses, 134

influence of, 134n.4

in Rex v. Abraham, 245, 246n.9

on wives’ trade/contracts, 130

Homes v. Wood, 250, 251n.9

horses, assaults on, 231, 231n.3

Horton v. Ruerby, 69

Horwitz, Morton, 41, 42, 42n.95

Hume, David, 55

History of Great Britain, 134n.6, 146, 147nn.8–9

on law/security/curiosity/knowledge connection, 81n.3

as a lawyer/Advocates’ Librarian, 147n.8, 154n.2

as a philosopher/mathematician/economist/ethicist/historian, 134n.6, 154n.2

Humfreys v. Vaughan, 263, 264n.3

hundred (county district), 95, 96n.3, 110n.7

husbands. See Baron and Feme; marriage

Hutchinson, Thomas, 40nn.85–86, 41, 49n.132, 50, 70, 240n.4

hypothecation (bottomry), 265, 266n.7, 301, 301n.1

inciting someone to sue, 271

In cuius rei testimonium clause, 309, 310n.5

indebitatus assumpsit, 134, 134n.3, 188nn.10–11, 252, 253n.9, 287

infants. See children

Inferior Court of Common Pleas, 308n.6

information, quashing of, 245, 246nn.9–10, 301

inheritance

by collateral descent, 151, 152nn.7–8, 153, 154n.6, 155, 156n.4

by coparcenage, 43, 155, 155n.3

in different countries, 237

and executory devises, 235, 236n.7

by full vs. half-brothers, 273, 274n.5

and gender, 43–44, 48, 51

of gifts of land, 154n.9

haeredibus de corpore procreandis, 269, 270n.3, 300, 300n.2

by legitimate sons, 269, 270n.3

by lineal descent, 152n.6, 153, 154n.1, 154n.9, 156n.4

male entail, 44, 48, 51, 154n.9, 196n.2, 235, 236n.6, 241, 265–66n.1 (see also Banister v. Henderson)

in Massachusetts, 43–44, 43n.102

by nephews, 237, 238n.5, 241, 242n.5

partibility in, 43–44, 43n.102, 51

by primogeniture, 155n.3

remainders, 235, 236n.6, 237, 265, 266n.1, 279, 312

rent reserved by an ancestor to an heir, 285, 305

representation vs. per capita

distribution of property, 241, 242n.5

tenants in tail, 265–66n.1, 279, 287, 299, 305, 306n.15

of titles of nobility/honor, 153, 154n.7

See also lands/tenements/hereditaments

Innocent and “Ux.” v. Taylor, 168n.5

Inns of Court (London), 5, 5n.6

in pais (without legal proceedings), 262n.3

inquiry/invention’s role in education, 9

An Institute of the Laws of England (Wood), 37

on descent, 155–56n.4

influence of, 26–27n.46, 30

JQ on, 89, 92

on master and apprentice, 108n.4

organization of, 156n.4

publication of, 91n.3

on releases, 202n.4, 207–8nn.1–2, 213n.3

See also Latin Maxims, maxim topics

Institutes (Justinian), 31, 32n.64, 65n.208, 347

Institutio Legalis (Bohun), 89, 91n.6

insurance, 74, 143–44nn.1–10, 143–45, 145nn.1–4

Ireland, 95

Isle of Man, 95

Jacksonian Democrats, 7

Jacob, Giles

Jacob’s Law Dictionary, 89, 91n.5

Student’s Companion, 89, 91n.7

Jacob’s Law Dictionary (Jacob), 89, 91n.5

Jarvis v. Hayes, 111n.15

Jefferies v. Austin, 188n.8

Jefferson, Thomas, 3–4n.3, 6, 19–20, 19n.35

Equity Commonplace Book, 6n

Legal Commonplace Book, 6n

Jewett, Amos, Jr., 38

jointure, 119, 120n.1, 255

joint vs. several liability/obligation

meaning of, 259, 260n.3, 273, 274n.8

and pleading in abatement, 275, 277–78n.1, 306n.5

pursuing an obligor after judgment against other obligors, 265, 267, 295, 303

when an obligor’s seal is torn off, 273, 303

when one obligee appears and the other defaults, 275, 277, 305, 306n.5

judges

arrest of judgment by, 271, 272n.7, 288n.6, 295, 303

bills of exception to, 174, 175n.4

as interpreting law, not making law, 170, 171n.7

as judging law, not facts, 174, 176

judicial equity/discretion, 70

vs. juries, 41, 55–62, 61n.191

and legislatures, 62–73

pragmatism of, 39

sitting on same cause in different courts, 287, 288n.5, 301

writs of error to, 174, 175n.5

See also under Latin Maxims

Judicature Acts (1873–1875), 295n

juries, 39, 146–50, 157–61, 170–76

attaint for, 146, 147n.6, 160n.6, 161

conditions of service on, 58

corruption/misdemeanor in, 263

and demurrers, 170, 170n.2

discretion re promissory notes, 188n.9

and equity, 55, 55n.164

facts judged by, 61–62, 174, 176

hardship of jury service, 62

Hume on, 55

importance as a category, 146n

vs. judges, 41, 55–62, 61n.191

judges’ instructions to, 159, 160n.6

law ignored by, 41

law judged by, 172, 174, 176

legal knowledge by, 146, 147n.2

from the neighborhood of the case, 161, 161n.2

neutrality/impartiality of, 148, 158n.6, 174, 175n.2

power of, 58

in sedition cases, 150, 150n.2

social rank of jurors, 174, 176

swearing in of, 174

testimony examined by, 170, 171n.6

trial by jury, 61, 61nn.191–92, 146, 147n.9, 148, 172, 174

value determined by appraisement vs., 269, 295

verdicts based on their knowledge, 157, 157n.4, 158n.6, 159

Juries Act (1825), 56n.175

justice. See under Latin Maxims

Justinian, 357

Corpus Juris Civilis, 353

Digest, 31, 328, 331, 340n.3 (see also Latin Maxims, maxim topics)

Institutes, 31, 32n.64, 65n.208, 347

Kamali, Elizabeth Papp, 10, 31

Kanchet’s Case, 235, 235n.2

Kant, Immanuel, 365n.1

Kellock Adminttix v. Kellock, 243

Kellock v. Robinson, 190n.7

Kennebeck Lands (Maine and Massachusetts), 241, 242n.8

Kent, James, 20, 27, 331

King’s Bench of Charles II, 102n.1

Knight v. Cambridge, 143n.1

knowledge, 81, 81n.3, 82

laches, 167, 167n.1

Lady Lodge’s Case, 168n.4

Lampet’s Case, 206n.4

lands/tenements/hereditaments, 44n.106, 74

acquired by descent, 151–55, 152nn.7–8, 154n.1, 154n.10, 155–56n.3–4, 155n.1

acquired by gift, 154n.9

acquired by occupancy, 151, 152n.3

administrators of land, 263, 264n.4

death of one seised in law, 267

fraud in conveyance of land, 281, 300

Gavelkind, 312

and gender, 43

half rent owed for half of land, 273, 297

improved value of the land, 317

interest in (see fee simple)

nil habuit in Tenementis pleas, 271, 272n.2, 305

for payment of debts, 295

releases of, 205, 209, 212

rent reserved by an ancestor to an heir, 285, 305

rent service, 287, 288nn.11–13

reversion land, grant of, 257, 258n.9

and writs of mort d’ancestor, 191, 192n.3

See also deeds; disseisin; freehold; inheritance; leases/lessors/lessees; seisin; tenants

Langbein, John, 20–21

Langdell, Christopher Columbus, 8, 27–28, 37, 45, 74–75

Langfort v. Tiler, 131nn.8–9

lathe (a land division), 95, 96n.2

Latin Maxims (JQ), 340–427

appearance/format of, 324, 327, 382

Coke’s influence on, 334 (see also Coke’s Institutes; Coke’s Reports)

discovery of, 323

footnotes/sources, generally, 31, 327–29, 327n.8, 330–31n.27, 331, 332, 336–38 (table) (see also Coke’s Reports)

functions of, 36

handwriting in, 362

JQ on meaning/application of

maxims, 333–34

manuscripts, 435

organization/pagination of, 326–27, 326–27nn.6–8, 329–30, 332, 334

plan for use of, 329–30, 334

reason for collecting, 330–32

and Roman and civil law, 10–11, 31–33

themes in, 336–37nn.1–2, 336–38 (table)

title/headings of, 332–33, 332n.38

translation of, 323, 330–31, 330n.22, 330n.25

maxim topics

absolute propositions do not require explanation, 360, 361, 361n.10

access obstructed destroys a convenience, 418, 419

accessory as following its principal, 396, 397

acting is same as not prohibiting what is possible, 410, 411

acting on command of a judge, no evil intent in, 380, 381, 381n.1, 383n.1

action does not arise from bare contract, 360, 361, 363n.13

actions are presumed done legitimately, until proved to the contrary, 414, 415

actions are presumed done solemnly, after a time, 414, 415, 415n.4

actions retracted cannot be pursued, 414, 415

acts done for protection of one’s body are done justly, 406, 407, 407n.6

acts that should not be done are valid once done, 406, 407

acts through another are acts by oneself, 374, 375, 379n.11

adjudicated matters are held as truth, 414, 415, 417n.10

ambiguous remarks, intention behind, 340, 340n.3, 341, 344–45, 347n.7

ambiguous silence, interpreting, 414, 415

ambiguous statement of law, deducing the will of, 344, 345, 345n.3

ancestors, reasons for what they established, 348, 349, 366, 367, 367n.2

anger, things said or done in the heat of, 348, 349, 349n.6

attempted act not detrimental unless the effect follows, 400, 401

authors sin more than actors, 410, 411

bad grammar does not void a writing/deed, 396, 397, 399n.7

bad is the explanation that destroys inner parts of text, 366, 367, 367n.1

bad use should be abolished, 368, 369, 373n.9

the beginning is the most important part of everything, 350, 351

certainty, making of, 396, 397, 397n.3

clandestine gifts as suspicious, 400, 401

commands that are gentle are more easily obeyed, 406, 407, 409n.13

a common error makes law, 390, 390n.6, 391, 393n.7

common law, things contrary to logic in, 348, 349, 349nn.3–4, 418, 419, 419n.7

common opinion’s authority, and rule of law, 422, 423

concessions, direct/indirect, 410, 411

conclusion, general, not extended to things specifically comprehended/expressed, 368, 369, 370n.17

a condition should be filled before the effect follows, 386, 387

conditions that build vs. destroy estates, liberal vs. strict interpretation of, 386, 387, 387n.5

confession pursued gently, 418, 419

consensus removes error, 390, 391, 393n.10, 426, 427

contemporary explanation is strongest in the law, 426, 426n.6, 427

contract, bare, action not arising from, 360, 361, 363n.13

contracts, examining beginning/inducements of, 350, 351, 351n.7, 352n.7

contracts, observing the will rather than words of parties to, 350, 351, 353n.10

contracts, parties’ ignorance of terms of, 354, 355

courts that have no record cannot imprison people, 364, 365

crimes, acquiescence equated with command, 354, 355

crimes, examining the will not the result, 354, 355, 355n.10

crimes, fleeing judgment is confession of, 418, 419, 419n.4

crimes, increased penalties for some, 358, 359

crimes, intent to injure required for, 400, 401

crimes, liberal interpretation of law in, 358, 359, 359n.2

crimes, past, estimation after the fact, 358, 359, 359n.3

criminal cases, clear proof in, 418, 419

custom, length of time vs. solidity of reason of, 368, 369

custom as best interpreter of laws, 368, 369, 371n.7

custom’s authority vs. manifest truth, 368, 369

custom sometimes prevailing over positive law, 368, 369, 371n.8, 373n.8

deceitful people as occupied with generalities, 400, 401, 403n.5

deed, contradiction of, 374, 375, 377n.7

deeds performed among others should not harm third parties, 380, 381, 385n.10

defrauding of those who understand/consent, 354, 355

doing with more what can be done with fewer is pointless, 422, 422n.9, 423

doubt, things introduced for removing as not harming common law, 380, 381

error, colored, accepted over naked truth, 386, 387

error, common, makes law, 390, 390n.6, 391, 393n.7

error, consent of those in, 354, 355

error removed by consensus, 390, 391, 393n.10, 426, 427

estates, buildings/fields contained within name of, 380, 381, 383n.3

in every thing, something arises which eradicates the thing itself, 426, 427, 427n.4

examples elucidate, not restrain, the law, 418, 419

exceptions establish the rule in those things not excepted, 364, 365, 365n.6

exceptions made from general discourse, 386, 387, 387n.3

expressed views vs. unspoken, 380, 381, 385nn.5–6

eyewitness worth more than ten listeners, 414, 415

fears that befall a constant man, 374, 375, 377n.9, 379n.9

final testaments held ratified, republic’s interest in, 422, 423

first in time as strong in law, 380, 381

first things are more true, 410, 411

force repelled with force permitted if by means of blameless defense, 406, 407, 418, 419, 420n.12

fraud, examined in civil law, 354, 355, 355n.5

general/doubtful statements, liberal interpretation of, 410, 411

good faith, not upholding what was not done in, 350, 351, 351n.1

the good/just becomes bad/unjust through force or fraud, 386, 387

grants interpreted against donors, 396, 397, 397n.1

greater things include lesser, 396, 397, 399n.4

greater vs. lesser, what is permitted for, 396, 397

harmful deed unpunished is better than an innocent person convicted, 354, 355

hateful/dishonest acts not presumed, 414, 415

heirs, acting sparingly toward, 350, 350n.6, 351, 351n.6, 352n.6

house as safest refuge, one’s own, 380, 381, 383n.2

impossible/dishonest vs. true/honest/possible things, presumption of, 418, 419

impunity’s effects on crime/wrongdoing, 406, 407

injury is not presumed, 414, 415

innovation’s novelty vs. utility, 368, 369

interpretation derived from what came before and after, 368, 369

invisible things do not exist, 410, 411, 413n.10

judges’ ignorance is often innocents’ misfortune, 426, 427

judging from examples vs. laws, 354, 355, 355n.7, 418, 419

justice/equity vs. rule of strict law, 340, 340n.7, 341, 344, 345

justice should be free, complete, and speedy, 360, 360n.4, 361, 361n.2

king’s action limited by law, 360, 361

king’s power as doing justice, 360, 361

law, adhering to the letter of, 374, 375

law, and kindness/equity vs. severity, 344, 345, 345n.6

law, as addressing all with one mouth, 360, 361

law, as a safe helmet/shield, 360, 361, 361n.1

law, as limiting the king’s action, 360, 361

law, as not attending to trivial matters, 400, 401

law, delays dreaded in, 360, 361

law, favorable, as remedy for similar cases, 360, 361

law, loss of benefits of for those who subvert it, 406, 407

law, reason alleged in deficient, 418, 419

law, rejecting too much subtlety in, 374, 375

law, specific with general reasoning, acceptance of, 374, 375, 426, 427

law, whole vs. parts of its propositions, 344, 345

lawful vs. unlawful commands, strict vs. broad interpretation of, 400, 401, 403n.8

law of England is the law of mercy, 426, 427

laws, being wiser than, 418, 419

laws, grasping force/power of, 340, 341

laws, liberal interpretation of, 340, 341, 344, 345, 358, 359, 359n.2

laws, words vs. intent of, 340, 341, 341n.4

laws aid the vigilant, not the sleeping, 390, 391, 393n.6

laws sometimes lie dormant; they never die, 422, 423

law strictly written, 340, 341, 341n.5

laws vs. points of law, 374, 375–76n.2

law that grants something as also granting what is necessary to possession of it, 368, 369, 371n.6

matters that have always had a certain interpretation, 348, 349

means removed frustrates the ends, 418, 419, 421n.12

meddling with matters not pertaining to oneself, 410, 411, 411n.2, 422, 423

mercy is the law of England, 426, 427

misfortune/peril, no obligation of exposure to, 374, 375

moderation/agreement as prevailing over law, 374, 375, 379n.14

money, suffering in the body from lack of, 406, 407, 407n.1

more done than should be done, 374, 375

natural laws as unchangeable, 368, 369, 371n.4

necessity conquers law, 390, 391

necessity is the law of time, 390, 391

not opposing what one could oppose, 410, 411

obscure matters, considering what is probable in, 350, 351, 353n.9

occasion which offers favorable response must be seized, 344, 345, 345n.2

ordering of a thing and what it is attained by, 400, 401

peace, as the republic’s life, 422, 423

penal cases, liberal interpretation of law in, 358, 359, 359n.2

pending lawsuit, altering nothing in, 360, 361, 361n.5

personal actions die with the person, 364, 364n.4, 365

personal remarks understood from circumstances of the person, 410, 411

petitioners lacking in one thing fall in all, 360, 361

points of law vs. laws themselves, 374, 375, 375n.2, 377n.2

polity must obey laws, not the reverse, 364, 365, 365n.7

possessor’s condition as better, 360, 361

precaution preferable to remedy, 400, 401, 401n.1

preceding thing’s relation to the next, 368, 369

presumptions stand until disproved, 364, 365, 414, 415, 417n.9

price, in buying/selling, 354, 355

principles/postulates that are higher, not proved/provable, 364, 365, 365n.1

principles should not be disputed, 364, 365, 365n.2

private harm more tolerable in law than public evil, 368, 369, 371n.5

prohibitions, direct/indirect, 380, 381, 422, 422n.1, 423

proof should be evident, manifest, and easy to understand, 414, 415, 415n.3

property, using your own so as not to damage another’s, 368, 369, 369n.2

property lost without one’s action/failing, 396, 397

property not used badly, republic’s interest in, 400, 401, 401n.4, 403n.4

punishment, leniency/kindness in, 348, 349, 349n.1, 358, 359

punishment, severity of, and fear, 400, 401, 405n.14, 426, 427

punishment, softened vs. exasperated, 400, 401, 405n.13

punishment not done without an injury, deed, or default, 426, 427

ratification relates back to, and equals, a command, 374, 375, 379n.12

reason, same, yields same right, 374, 375, 377n.5

reason alleged in deficient law, 418, 419

reason for a law ceases, thus the law ceases, 374, 375, 376n.7

reason sought in all matters subverts reason, 368, 369

record, verifying by country/jury, 360, 361, 361n.8

religion, highest reason is that which acts for, 406, 407

remark expressing two meanings, 344, 345, 345n.4

the republic’s life is peace, 422, 423

right of increase/survivorship among merchants, 422, 423

a right sometimes sleeps; it never dies, 422, 423

saying nothing same as saying too little, 418, 419

soil ownership, and all above it, 380, 381, 383n.4

state of mind imposes name on work, 390, 391, 393n.5

testaments, liberal interpretation of ambiguities in, 350, 351, 351n.4

testaments, writings strength derived from will, 350, 351, 351n.3

testaments, writings that are not understood in, 350, 351

testator’s words, meaning/intent of, 350, 351

text destroyed by bad exposition, 366, 367, 367n.1

things spoken to one end should not be directed toward another, 390, 391

transferring to another more of a right than you have, 390, 391, 395n.11

uncustomary conclusions introduce suspicion, 400, 401

understanding something necessarily/tacitly, 380, 381

unjust acts againt the law, calling upon law’s assistance for, 406, 407

unsuitable things not permitted, 418, 419

useful things not spoiled by useless things, 380, 381

welfare of the people as supreme law, 406, 407

what has/is done vs. what ought to be done, 354, 355, 355n.13

the will not reckoned according to the act, 400, 401

words and their effect, 386, 387, 389n.8

words lacking ambiguity, no explanation to be made against, 422, 423, 423n.1

words of deeds understood against grantor, 390, 391, 391n.2

words referenced by vs. inserted in an instrument, 422, 423

words should be understood in most lenient sense, 410, 410n.8, 411, 413n.6

words should serve intent, not the contrary, 386, 387

words that are equivocal and doubtfully set down, understanding of, 390, 391, 391n.1

words understood according to subject matter, 390, 391, 391n.3

words understood from reason for speaking, 410, 411

worth of a thing is as much as it can be sold for, 354, 355

writings/deeds, liberal interpretation of, 386, 387, 389n.6

writings/deeds not voided by bad grammar, 396, 397, 399n.7

wrongdoers, innocents threatened by sparing of, 406, 407

wrongdoers provoked by anger, lighter punishment for, 406, 407

wrongdoer’s punishment, secret vs. public, 406, 407

Lavie and Another, Assignees of Jane Cox, A Bankrupt v. Phillips and Others, Assignees of John Cox, A Bankrupt, 131n.5

Law: or, Discourse thereof (Finch), 92, 93n.8

Law Commonplace Book (JQ), 180 accessibility of, 75

vs. John Adams’s and Jefferson’s commonplace books, 6n, 17

on Francis Bacon, 318

captions/subdivisions of, 54–55

“Case Notes Section,” 22, 25, 37–38

citations in margins of, 103–4n.2

on civil law study, 32–33n.65

cross-referencing system for, 114n.1

dating of, 184n, 186n.3

Dickins’s influence on, 32

dimensions/bindings of the notebooks, 11, 17n.34

Hale’s influence on, 15, 17, 21, 25, 27n.46, 30, 32

Holt’s influence on, 134n.4

Hume’s influence on, 147n.8

importance of, 6, 11, 20, 37, 73–75

index, 10, 12–15, 14, 17, 97–101, 114n.1, 295–308

JQ begins writing, 19, 75, 80

Legis Miscellanea section (see Legis Miscellanea)

Locke’s influence on, 15, 17, 21

manuscript, 11–17, 14, 18

manuscripts, 430, 431–32

maxim/commonplacing approach to legal education in, 9, 31 (see also Latin Maxims)

microfilming of the notebooks, 12

organization/style/choice of subjects in, 12–13, 15, 18, 22, 327n.7

price for, 12

price paid for the notebooks, 81

purpose of, 58, 68–69

Thomas Reeve’s influence on, 26, 32

Reports cross-referenced to, 10, 17, 17n.34, 22, 22n, 25, 39

sources for, 25–26, 26–27n.46, 41–42

as a system of learning, 21–22, 23, 25

table of contents, 97–101, 114n.1

thin, unmarked volume, 11–12, 17n.34

Wood’s influence on, 26–27n.46, 30

See also specific legal concepts

“Law file A” and “Law file C” (JQ), 17, 22, 25

The Law of Bills of Exchange (Cunningham), 189n.2

Lawrence v. Jacob, 189n.3

Law Reports (JQ)

Angier v. Jackson, 60–61, 239–40n.4

as evidence of actual colonial law, 58

importance of, 51

Law Commonplace Book cross-referenced to, 10, 17, 17n.34, 22, 22n, 25, 39

on male entail, 44

manuscripts, 430, 431, 432–35

maxims in, 332 (see also Latin Maxims)

period of writing of, 21–22

red cover of, 239–40n.4

Rogers v. Kenwrick, 114n.6

See also specific cases

laws, 177–85

advantages of, 177

broadest meaning of, 179

divine/canon law, 177

governed by justice, 312, 313n.1

importance of, 183, 185

JQ’s sources for, 66

judges’ obligation to determine cases according to, 183

orders of, 62–63, 64, 177

political law, 64, 177, 179

types of, 177

See also under civil law; common law; Latin Maxims; law of nations; Legis Miscellanea; natural law; Roman law; statutes/acts

law schools, 3, 20

See also specific schools

laws of nations, 177

civil law, 64

definition of, 179, 181

founding principle of, 181

natural law as source of, 42, 64, 181

political law, 64, 177, 179

Lawson, F. H., 19n.35

The Lawyer’s Light (Dodderidge), 33–34

The Lawyiers Logick (Franunce), 33n.66

leases/lessors/lessees, 74, 163–64nn.3–4

debt to cover rent, 305, 306n.16

fee simple by granting rent, 312

half rent owed for half of land, 273, 297

lessees’ expulsion, 252, 253n.3, 301

rent reserved by an ancestor to an heir, 285, 305

suspension by either party, 305

See also estoppels; tenants

Lee v. Mayer, 168n.3

Lefcourt, Robert, 4n.4

legacy, 165–69, 167n.1, 168n.6, 207

legal authority and power

and appeals to the Privy Council, 39, 39n.83, 40–41n.87

common law as source of, 39–42, 39n.81, 40nn.85–86

and common law vs. statute law, 42, 42n.95

judges and legislatures, 62–73

of judges vs. juries, 41, 55–62, 61n.191

overview of, 54–55

and pragmatism, 39, 40, 41, 41n.88

public attitudes toward, 39

Legal Commonplace Book (Jefferson), 6n

legal education, 19–36

casebook approach to, 8, 27–28

categories of, 45

via civil law guides, 33n.65

in common law, 19, 28–30

via commonplacing, 9–10, 21, 27–30

(see also commonplace books; and specific books)

evolution of, 20–21

four-year curriculum, 8

at the Inns of Court, 5, 5n.6

law professorships established, 19–20

via law reports, 29–30

via lectures vs. apprenticeship, 7–8, 20

via maxims (see Latin Maxims; maxims)

modern curriculum’s 18th-century counterparts, 74–75

overview of, 3–4

practical vs. theoretical, 4n.4, 5 (see also apprentices/apprenticeship, legal)

of the professional elite, 5–6

of Southern lawyers, 5–6

student interaction with mass of law, 25–26, 27–30

text-and-recitation system of, 20, 27

legal positivism, 182n.4

legislative intent, 69, 70–72, 341n.4

Legis Miscellanea (JQ), 245–94, 309–20

on action against an unmarried woman who later marries, 259

on acts of Parliament, citing, 255, 256n.5

on administrators of land, 263, 264n.4

on arrest by night vs. day, 289

on arrest of judgment, 271, 272n.7

on arrest without touch, 275

Ashton v. Blagrove, 252, 253n.8

on authority to act, name of person giving, 285

on authority to act, vs. interest, 285

on award revocation due to marriage, 259, 260nn.8–10

on awards tendered but refused, 273

on bailiff finding outward door open, then breaking inner doors, 293

on bail upon joint and several recognizance, 279

bonds, agreement to, 255, 256n.11

on bonds, manner of payment of, 255

on bonds, mistaken dates of, 255, 256n.9

on bonds, names in, 245

on bonds against past vs. future escapes, 281

on bonds of twenty years standing, 279, 280n.5

on bridges’ care, 279

Carter v. Sheppard, 248, 248n.1

cases omitted from the index, 307, 308n.15

on claiming a way, 255–56n.1

on a claim within view as reducing a freehold in law to a possession, 287, 288n.5

Cloud v. Nicholson, 252, 253n.6

commanded/authorized acts, doing more vs. less than, 289, 290nn.6–7

on condition for payment of money, 291–93, 293–94nn.1–3

on curtesy, 313

on the death of a wounded man, 250

on death of one having goods in several provinces, 285

on death of one seised in law, 267

on debt, and payment of rent, 267

on debt, one man submitting for another’s, 287, 288n.15

on debtor’s payment applied to debts as creditor wishes, 252

on debts, date of payment of, 257, 258nn.1–2

on debts, personal estate as payment of, 269, 270n.8

on debts raised by a will, 261

on debts upon bonds for awards to infants, 283

on debt upon an obligation, 279

on debt upon judgment in trespass for damages, 250, 251n.10

on deeds, premises of, 309, 310nn.4–5

on a deed’s refusal by the donee, 261, 262n.3

on a deed without premises, habendum, tenendum, reddendum, 309, 310n.4

on demurrers, 252, 265, 266n.9

on detinue against husband and wife, 293, 294n.6

on a disseisor’s right to land, 259, 260nn.4–5

on dower, 315, 317

on an estate’s express limitation by testator, 269

on evidence, time and place of, 287, 288n.4

on executor/administrator in an action in his own name, 283

on executor not named in the writ, plea of, 267, 268n.6

on executor’s administration of an infant, 277

on executor’s breaking of a covenant, 283, 284n.9

on executor’s liability for testator’s goods if sued, 273, 274n.6

on fee simple, 309, 310

fines, civil actions against persons in execution for, 255

on fraud in conveyance of land, 281

on funeral expenses, 265

on goldsmiths as bankers, 245, 255

on goods delivered for safe keeping, later stolen, 275, 276n.3

on guardians of underage heirs/infants, 265, 266n.6, 289

Hawkins v. Cordy, 245, 246n.12

on a husband’s administration of wife’s estate, 277

on husband’s/wife’s age, and husband as attorney for her, 263, 264n.3

on hypothecation (bottomry), 265, 266n.7

on inciting someone to sue, 271

on indebitatus assumpsit, 252, 253n.9, 287

infants, suits on behalf of, 257

on infants’ debts/bonds, 289, 290n.12, 291

on information, quashing of, 245, 246nn.9–10

on inheritance by full vs. halfbrothers, 273, 274n.5

on inheritance by legitimate sons, 269, 270n.3

on joint executors pleading severally, 269

on joint tenants, 255, 261, 289, 289n.3, 290n.5, 310, 317

on a judge sitting on same cause in different courts, 287, 288n.5

Law Commonplace updated via, 25, 37

and the Law Reports, 22

on lessees’ expulsion, 252, 253n.3

on loss of money, 248, 248n.1

on a lunatic’s injury of someone, 277, 278n.10

madmen, suits on behalf of, 257

on the manner of tender/payment, 267

manuscripts, 432

on marriage to one’s neice, 267

on merchants’ custom, 245, 246–47n.13

on misnomer pleas, 255, 258n.7

on negative pregnant pleas, 273, 274n.10

on new trials, 263, 264n.1

on nil debet pleas, 252, 253n.2, 271, 272n.2

on nil habuit in Tenementis pleas, 271, 272n.2

on non culpabilis pleas, 281, 282n.10

on non est factum pleas, 255, 256n.8, 261, 262n.8, 275, 276n.10, 287

on non prosequitur judgment, 283, 284n.3

on notes, date of, 263

on notes as not discharging debts, 252

on notes one makes no demand for payment of, 281

Nurse v. Frampton, 248, 249n.3

on obligation to seek payment, and obligee’s being in England, 269, 271

on a parish not repairing a way, 252

on partnership survivor’s debts, 281

on perjury, 252, 253n.4

on pleading a deed with a date/place, 248, 249n.4

on pleas in abatement, 257

on promises, absolute vs. conditional, 250

on promises of marriage, 281

on a promise to a wife in

consideration of her curing a wound, 250

on a promise to pay money, 263

on property in personal goods vs. bare possession, 293, 294n.8

on Quando plus fit, 289, 290nn.6–7

on a quare impedit (right to appoint clergy), 257, 258n.3

on quod querens nil capiat per billam judgment, 281, 282n.11

on release of a bare right, 310

on release of men bound jointly, 250, 250n.2

on release of multiple trespassers, 250

on remainders, 261, 265, 266n.1, 279, 312

on rent owed for half of land, 273

on rent reserved by an ancestor to an heir, 285

on rent service, 287, 288nn.11–13

retroactive index to, 11, 13, 15, 17, 21, 25, 54, 295–307, 308n.15

on reversion land, grant of, 257, 258n.9

Rex v. Abraham, 245, 246n.9

on a riot, number needed for, 271

on sheriff ‘s death, prisoners’ escape following, 248, 249nn.8–9

on a sheriff ‘s receipt of money upon a capias, 273, 273n.1, 275

on sheriff ‘s taking insufficient bail, 248, 249n.6

on sheriff ‘s taking of wearing apparel, 283, 284n.7

Short v. Maynard, 245, 246n.11

on slander/libel, 248, 248n.2

on special pleading, 263, 264n.6

on spitting in someone’s face, 281

Springett v. Chadwick, 252, 253–54n.11, 293, 293n.1

on statutes, actions implied by prohibitions in, 275, 276n.6

on statutes, “may be done”‘s meaning in, 261

on sueing for vexation, 271

on suit accompt, 265, 266n.5

on tenants for life, 319

on tenants for years, 320

on tenants in tail, 265–66n.1, 279, 287

on trees, grant of, 257, 275, 276n.3

on trespass, 279, 280nn.9–10, 281, 282n.4

on trover, 259, 271, 272n.7, 275, 281

on usury vs. Nomine Poenae (penalty for nonperformance), 245, 246n.4

on value determined by appraisement vs. jury, 269

on warrant of record vs. warrant in law, 275

on wife’s sale of land, 259, 260n.11, 279

on wills, by executory devise vs. remainder, 261

on witnesses in suits involving them, 263, 264n.7

on a woman’s will countermanded by her later marriage, 261–62n.1

on women’s Christian names, 283, 284n.12

on a Writ of Error, 285, 285n

on writs, as amendable, 285, 286n.2

on writs, execution of, 255

on writs, testing of, 271, 272n.5

on writs returnable on a Sunday, 257

See also joint vs. several liability/obligation

Leglise v. Champante, 232n.5

Lekeux v. Nash, 147nn.3–4

Leonard’s Reports, 142n.7, 168n.4, 224n.4

Levinz’s Reports

Ashton v. Jennings, 279, 280n.4

Bastard v. Stukely, 169n.2

Fawcet v. Beavres, 110n.11

Feltham v. Executors Harlston, 269, 270n.8

Guillan v. Gill, 142n.7

JQ’s familiarity with, 274n.3

Lobly v. Gildart, 254n.11

Mottram v. Jolly, 257, 258n.8

publication of, 169n.2, 213n.2

Strode v. Berager, 287, 288n.5

Tracy v. Smith, 273, 274n.5

Levitical Degrees, 267, 268n.4

libel/slander, 248, 248n.2

Lilly, John: Practical Register, 55, 65n.6, 157n.3, 323

Lilly’s Case, 106, 106n.3

Litchfield Law School (Connecticut), 3, 20

Littleton’s Tenures, 89, 91n.9, 209–10n.1, 210n.3, 213n.2, 221

See also Coke on Littleton

Livingston, William, 4n.4

Lobly v. Gildart, 254n.11

Locke, John, 9

“A New Method of a Common-place book,” 10, 15, 17, 21

London Journal (JQ), 430, 431

London v. Craven, 115, 116n.6

Lord Cheyneys Case, 135, 135n.2

Lord Raymond’s Reports

Blackborough v. Davies, 244n.4

Cage v. Acton, 119, 120n.2

Chichester v. Phillips, 161, 162n.4

Garret v. Johnson, 287, 288n.4

Langfort v. Tiler, 131n.9

Nurse v. Frampton, 248, 249n.3

Rex v. Newman, 283, 284n.12

Squire v. Grevett, 115, 116nn.6–7

Lovelace v. Cocket, 253n.11

Lovelace v. Crockett, 254n.11

lunatic’s injury of someone, 277, 278n.10, 301

Lutterel v. Reynell, 138n.3

Lutwyche’s Livre des Entries, 258n.5

Lynde, Benjamin, Jr., 59, 70

Macaulay, Catharine: The History of England, 56, 56n.172, 159, 160n.5

madmen, suits on behalf of, 257, 301

Magna Carta (1215), 65, 223–24n.3

Maine, Henry Sumner, 54

majority, age of, 277

male entail, 44, 48, 51, 154n.9, 196n.2, 235, 236n.6, 241, 265–66n.1

See also Banister v. Henderson

manuscripts (JQ’s) at Massachusetts Historical Society, 429–37

Marbury v. Madison, 67

marriage

award revocation due to, 259, 260nn.8–10, 297, 298n.8

bonds not extinguished upon, 119, 120n.2

and curtesy, 48 (see also curtesy)

debts of wives vs. husbands, 48–50

dower to widows, 48, 120n.1

evidence of promise of, 134

forced, 45, 48, 117, 118n.4

husband’s administration of wife’s estate, 277, 295

legal powers of wives, 43, 47–48, 305

to a neice, 267, 301

privileges/rights of wives vs. husbands, 45–46

promise of, 281, 297, 301

proof of, 50–51

security of wives, 48

trade/contracts by wives, 45–47, 48

wife’s land brought into, 44, 48

wife’s possessions/property, 44, 48, 48n.127, 260n.12

wife’s sale of land, 259, 260n.11, 279, 280n.3

wife’s subordination, 44, 45–48

woman’s will countermanded by her later marriage, 261–62n.1, 297, 298n.9

See also Baron and Feme

Marshall, John, 3

Marshalsea Case, 275, 276n.6, 381, 381n.1

Martial, 89, 91n.8

Martin v. Chauntry, 188n.6

Martin v. Crump, 112n.1

Massachusetts

charter of, 39, 39n.81, 40, 41n.87, 242n.6

inheritance laws in, 43–44, 43n.102

Massachusetts Historical Society manuscript collection, 429–37

Massachusetts Superior Court of Judicature, 308n.6

matters in pais, 193, 193n.1

maxims

authority of, 34–36, 325, 331–32

books of, 33–34, 33–34n.66 (see also specific books)

common law grounded in, 33, 34–36, 95

and comparison of legal systems, 36n.74

in the Law Commonplace Book (see Latin Maxims)

learning via, 9, 21, 33–35, 33n.66

Roman and civil law sources of, 31–33, 34–35

vs. rules, 332–33

Mayes, Daniel, 4n.4

Maynard, Sir John, 57, 161–62n.3, 172, 173n.3

McEvoy, Arthur F., 61n.191

McKirdy, Charles R., 4n.4

Mead v. Hamond, 110n.12

Memorial of Boston, 35, 63–64

memory/custody’s role in education, 9

men and women’s attraction to each other, 179

merchants’ custom, 245, 246–47n.13

“Method for studying the Common Law” (Hale), 22

Method of Studying the Civil Law (Dickins), 27, 31, 32, 32n.65

Michaelmas, 209, 210n.4

Middlesex Cases, 11–12, 17n.34

Middleton v. Baker, 171nn.5–6

Miller, Arthur R., 61n.191

Modern Reports

Ashton v. Blagrove, 252, 253n.8

on bailiff finding outward door open, then breaking inner doors, 293, 294n.5

Blythe v. Hill, 254n.11

Clark v. Dealy, 134n.4

Cloud v. Nicholson, 252, 253n.6

Crosse v. Bilson, 257, 258n.10

Dod v. Monger, 281, 282n.4

Harvey v. Broad, 257, 258n.11

Kanchet’s Case, 235, 235n.2

Lutterel v. Reynell, 138n.3

Oliver v. Vernor, 275, 276n.4

Rex v. Thorogood, 252, 253n.4

Savage v. Robury, 248, 248n.2

Springett v. Chadwick, 252, 253–54n.11, 293, 293n.1

Staple v. Heydon, 255–56n.1

Thompson v. Leach, 256n.12

Warren v. Consett, 254n.11

money, loss of, 248, 248n.1

Monroe, James, 3–4n.3

Montesquieu, Charles-Louis de Secondat, Baron de la Brede et de

L’Esprit des Lois, 62–63, 64, 177–78n.2

months, computation of, 257, 258nn.2–3, 299, 301

Moor, Sarah, 38

Morris v. Lee, 188n.5

Mottram v. Jolly, 257, 258n.8

Mustard v. Hoppey, 250, 250n.1

natural law, 177

John Adams on, 63–64

Burlamaqui on, 63, 181

Hobbes on, 64, 181

law of nations as derived from, 42, 64, 181

meanings of, 181

Montesquieu on, 63

Otis on, 64

Romans on, 63

source of their force, 179

system of, 181

types of, 63, 179

as unchangeable/immutable, 371n.4

Needler v. Bishop of Winchester, 260n.11

negative pregnant plea, 273, 274n.10, 301, 302n.6

negligence, liability for, 278n.10

neo-Thomists, 63

New Abridgment of the Law (M. Bacon), 112n.4, 138n.5, 147n.6, 236n.7, 260n.9, 260n.11, 260n.13

A New Institute of the Imperial or Civil Law (Wood), 33n.65, 51, 343

“A New Method of a Common-place book” (Locke), 10, 15, 17, 21

Newmyer, R. Kent, 7n.11, 29, 30

The New Natura Brevium (Fitzherbert), 110n.10, 363n.12, 377n.7, 401n.1, 415n.1

nihil habuit plea, 163–64n.3

nil debet plea, 252, 253n.2, 271, 272n.2, 301, 303, 305

nolo prosequi, 303–4n.1

Nomine Poenae (penalty for nonperformance), 245, 246n.4

Nomotechnia (Finch), 33n.66

non assumpsit, 47, 131, 191, 250

non est factum, 191, 192n.2, 261, 262n.8, 275, 276n.10, 287, 303, 305

non prosequitur judgment, 283, 284n.3

non pros vs. non prosequitus, 303–4n.1

Norman Isles, 95

Norwood v. Fairservice, 58–59

notes/bills of exchange, 74

and contingent events, 187, 187nn.2–4

date of, 263, 303, 307

debts as not discharged by, 252, 253–54n.11

demand on drawer of the note, 189, 189nn.1–3

failure to demand payment diligently, 281, 299, 299n.2

for gaming, 190n.6

indebitatus assumpsit cause of action re, 188nn.10–11, 287

indorsement of, 189, 189n.3, 190nn.5–7, 299

jury’s discretion re, 188n.9

and merchants’ custom, 245, 246–47n.13

negotiable vs. non-negotiable, 59, 187–88nn.4–8, 187n.2, 188n.11

note of hand, 187, 252, 263, 303

servants’ taking of, 299

nourishment, seeking after, 179

Noy, William: A Treatise of the Principall Grounds and Maximes of the Lawes of this Kingdome, 33–34n.66, 92, 93n.4, 108n.5

Noyes v. Hopgood, 254n.11

Nurse v. Frampton, 248, 249n.3

Oates v. Frith, 286n.6

obligations and deeds, 74, 103, 105, 105n.1, 303, 304n.5

Observations upon the Statutes (Barrington), 172n.2

Ockham’s Razor, 422, 422n.9, 423

Octavius, Gnaeus, 217–18n.2

“Of Judicature” (F. Bacon), 171n.7

Old Bailey (London), 308n.6

Oliver, Peter, 49, 59

Oliver v. Vernor, 275, 276n.4

omne maius trahit ad se minus, 289, 290n.5

Otis, James, Jr., 36n.74

legal education of, 3

maxims used by, 35, 36

on natural law, 64

on the Stamp Act, 64–65

owelty, 310, 313n.1

Oxford University (England), 102n.2

Page v. Kirke, 250, 251n.10

Paine, Robert Treat, 3

Parliamentary Register (Almon), 184n

Parsons, Theophilius, Sr., 6–7n

partibility, 43–44, 43n.102, 51

Partitionum Juris Civilis (Vinnius), 357

partnership survivor’s debts, 281, 303

Partridge v. Strange & Croker, 221, 222n.7

Paxton’s Case of the Writs of Assistance, 72

payment, manner of, 267, 303

peace, as a natural law, 179

pedagogy via apprenticeship, 4–5, 4n.4, 6, 11, 21

See also legal education

Penn, William, 150n.2

perjury, 134, 135, 252, 253n.4, 305, 306n.12

See also fraud

Perkins, John: A Profitable Book, 288n.3, 395n

personal vs. real actions, 103

The Petition of the Jurors in the Trials of Captain Preston and the British Soldiers, 72–73

pillory as punishment, 305, 306n.12

A Plan for the Study of the Feudal and English Laws in the University of Dublin (Sullivan), 19, 21

plantations, 70–71, 95

pleading

abatement, pleas in, 257, 303, 304n.11, 306n.5

to action, 191

in bar, 191, 193

Coke on Littleton on, 197nn.4–5

deed with a date/place, 248, 249n.4

re estates, 196

and evidence, 305, 305n, 306n.5 (see also evidence)

executor not named in the writ, 267, 268n.6, 305, 305n

giving a special matter in evidence, 196, 197n.9, 197nn.4–7

misnomer pleas, 255, 258n.7, 301

negative pregnant, 273, 274n.10, 301, 302n.6

nil debet, 252, 253n.2, 271, 272n.2, 301, 303, 305

nil habuit in Tenementis, 271, 272n.2, 305

non culpabilis, 281, 282n.10, 307, 308n.10

non est factum, 255, 256n.8, 261, 262n.8, 275, 276n.10, 287, 303, 305

plene administravit, 269, 270n.1, 295

and power of attorney, 258n.7, 305

rules of, 193

special, 263, 264n.6

surplusage, 307, 308n.5

re trespass, 103, 114n.4, 191, 196, 197n.6, 303

virtute cujus, 198, 199nn.3–4

of warrant/authority, 200, 200n.1

See also accord; demurrers; evidence

Pleas of the Crown (Hawkins), 29, 92, 93n.7, 134n.5, 223–24n.3, 246n.10

plene administravit plea, 269, 270n.1, 295

Plowden, Edmund: Commentaries or Reports, 29, 61, 160n.7, 220n.2, 222n.7, 332, 367n.1

Political Commonplace Book (JQ), 437

Poplewell v. Wilson, 188n.7

powers

commanded/authorized acts, doing more vs. less than, 289, 290nn.6–7, 305

of donee on execution of deed, 305

of married women, 43, 47–48, 305

of revocations of uses, 205

See also legal authority and power

Practical Register (Lilly), 55, 65n.6, 157n.3, 323

pragmatism, 39

Prat, Benjamin, 153, 154n.2, 233, 234n

Preface to Rolle’s Abridgement (Hale), 92

on commonplacing methods/benefits, 16, 93n.9

influence of, 15, 16n.29, 24

JQ influenced by, 10, 17, 21, 24, 25, 30

publication of, 15–16, 93n.9

on seven-year use of commonplace books in legal training, 37n.78

on student’s interaction with mass of law, 25–26

Prescot’s Case, 257, 258n.1

primogeniture, 43, 155n.3

Principes du droit naturel (Burlamaqui), 181–82n.2

Principia sive Maxima Legum Anglie, 33n.66

prochein army, 289, 290n.8, 301

A Profitable Book (Perkins), 288n.3, 395n

promises

absolute vs. conditional, 250, 307

express vs. implied, 47n.122, 131n.7

of marriage, 281, 297, 301

to pay money, 263

See also assumpsit

property

adjudged changed, 305

distribution of intestate’s, 242n.5

in personal goods vs. bare possession, 293, 294n.8, 297

real (see estates; freehold; lands/tenements/hereditaments; leases/lessors/lessees; releases)

representation vs. per capita distribution of, 241, 242n.5

wife’s, 44, 48, 48n.127, 260n.12

See also under Latin Maxims

“Province Law called the Tax Act,” 69–70

provinces, bona notibilia in, 295, 296n.3

Pufendorf, Samuel von, 181–82n.2

punishment/torture, 269, 295

See also under Latin Maxims

purchases

and ascent, 151, 156n

of land, vs. inheritance, 44, 153, 154n.1, 155, 312

of remainder by daughter, 265, 305

Putnam, John, 31

Quando plus fit, 289, 290nn.6–7

quantum meruit, 109–10n.1

quare impedit (right to appoint clergy), 257, 258n.3

quashing, 298n.10

Queen v. Ingersall, 147n.5

Quincy, Edmund (“Ned”; JQ’s brother), 15

Quincy, Josiah, Jr.

books borrowed from Harvard College Library, 439–44

brilliance of, 11, 20, 75

death of, 326, 440

familiarity with Hale’s Preface to Rolle’s Abridgement, 16

familiarity with Locke’s “New Method of a Common-place book,” 10

handwriting of, 80, 172–73nn.2–3

health of, 440

Latin fluency of, 31

“Law file A” and “Law file C,” 17, 22, 25

law file system of, 94n.2

legal education of, 30, 76–77 (table), 234n

London Journal, 430, 431

lost legal notebook (vol. 2) of, 191n

patriotism of, 11

personald notebooks of, 111n.16

Political Commonplace Book, 437

Rutledge Reports, 435–36

Southern Journal, 5, 12, 41, 75, 430–31

and Thacher, 2, 76–77 (table)

See also Law Commonplace Book; Law Reports

Quincy, Samuel (JQ’s brother), 15, 17n.34, 234n

quod querens nil capiat per billam judgment, 281, 282n.11

race. See free blacks; slaves

racial politics in paternity cases, 38

rapes (a land division), 95, 96n.2

Rastell, William

Les Termes de la Ley, 103–4n.2

Rastell, William: Les Termes de la Ley, 89, 91n.4

rational arts, 9

Read, John, 241–42n.3

reading without hearing/conference/meditation/recordation, 83–84, 84n.1

real property. See estates; freehold; lands/tenements/hereditaments; leases/lessors/lessees; releases

reason, 63, 95

See also under Latin Maxims

record of voluntary confession of perjury, 305, 306n.12

Red Reports. See Law Reports

Reed’s Case, 62

Reeve, Tapping, 20, 27

Reeve, Thomas

Advice to His Nephew in the Study of Common Law, 32

as Judge of the Common Pleas and

Chief Justice, 89n, 90

“To his Nephew, Directions for beginning the Study of Law,” 22, 26, 27, 89, 89n, 90, 91n.1

Rehnquist, William, 61n.191

releases, 74, 205–14

of actions/causes of action, 205, 207, 208n.6, 209, 210–11nn.5–7, 210n.3, 212n.2

and awards of money, 115

of bare rights, 310, 311n.12

by/to husbands, wives, or infants, 203, 204n.3

of conditions annexed to estates, 205

vs. confirmations, 203

of covenants, 205

of debts, 207, 209, 305

definition of, 201, 207n

of demands/claims, 212–13n.1, 213n.3

to disseisors, 201, 202n.11, 305, 310, 311n.12

to estates, 201, 202nn.7–9, 203, 212, 214n.7

of executions, 209, 210n.1

by executors, 203, 204n.5, 204n.7

express vs. implied, 201

fee simple via, 310, 311n.9

of lands/tenements/hereditaments, 205, 209, 212

in law vs. deed, 201

of legacies, 207

of men bound jointly, 250, 250n.2, 305

by Mitter le Droit, 201, 202n.9

by Mitter le Estate, 201, 202n.8

of multiple trespassers, 250, 305

of personal things, 207

of possibilities, 207, 209

powers of revocations of uses, 205

on record vs. by deed, 203

and rights, 103, 205–6n.1, 209, 212

of services/rents/commons from lands, 205, 207, 209

by tenants, 203, 204n.8, 305

of titles to goods/chattels, 205

to two parties, 212, 213n.6

types of things that can be released, 205, 206n.4, 207

of warranties, 205

words used to release, 201, 202n.4, 212, 213nn.3–4

remainder men, 236n.6, 265, 266n.1, 307, 308n.13

remainders, 235, 236n.6, 237, 261, 265, 266n.1, 279, 300, 312

rents. See leases/lessors/lessees

rent service, 287, 288nn.11–13

Reports. See Law Reports

Reports and Arguments in the Common Pleas (Vaughan), 67–68, 222n.4, 224nn.5–6

Rex v. Abraham, 245, 246n.9

Rex v. Hains, 137n.2

Rex v. Newman, 283, 284n.12

Rex v. Thorogood, 252, 253n.4

Rex v. Whiting, 263, 264n.7

Reymond v. Hundred de Okins, 110n.7

Reynolds v. Clarke, 231n.2

Rigeway’s Case, 265, 266n.9

riot, number needed for, 271, 305

Robinson v. Stone, 190n.5

Rogers v. Kenwrick, 114n.6

Rolle, Henry

Un Abridgment Des Plusieurs Cases, 15–16, 92 (see also Preface to Rolle’s Abridgement)

Roman law

American lawyers’ interest/expertise in, 31–32, 31n

categories of, 62–63

importance to legal systems, 10–11, 11n.19, 331–32, 357

and Latin Maxims, 10–11, 31–33

law of nations, 64

maxim sources in, 31–33, 34–35

See also civil law; Latin Maxims; maxims

Royall, Isaac, 7

Russell, Chambers, 70

Russell v. Oakes, 59

Russel’s Case, 204n.3

Rutledge Reports (JQ), 435–36

Salkeld’s Reports, 92, 93n.2, 106n.4, 244n.3, 248n.1, 254n.11, 264n.7

Salmon, John, 49

“Salt-case,” 243, 243n

Saunder’s Reports, 29, 284n.10

Savage v. Robury, 248, 248n.2

Scalia, Antonin, 61n.191

Scollay v. Dunn, 39n.83, 41n.87

Scotland, 95

Seaman v. Fonereau, 144n.4

seamen’s tickets, 106, 106n.4

Searle v. Lord Barrington, 279, 280n.5

seck (dry rent service), 125, 126n.6

security produced by common law, 81, 81n.3

sedition, 150, 150n.2

seisin

by the deceased, required to an heir to take, 152n.8

in deed, 313, 313n.7, 315, 316n.4

definition of, 299n.4

and dower, 315

husband seised to use of his wife, 123

in law, 315, 316n.2, 316n.4

lessor seised of tenements, 163

release required for, 202n.11

seised in demesne as of fee, 267, 268n.5, 299, 299n.4, 315

and virtute cujus plea, 198, 199nn.3–4

by a wife (feme covert), 45, 315, 316nn.1–2

See also disseisin

servants, 106–9

marriage/children of, 53

notes taken by, 299

rights of, 52–53

status after master’s death, 53–54

Seventh Amendment, 61, 61nn.191–92

several vs. joint liability/obligation. See joint vs. several liability/obligation

Sewall, Samuel, 28–29, 30

Sheppard v. Gosnold, 222n.4

sheriff

insufficient bail taken by, 248, 249n.6, 305

jurors brought to Westminster Hall by, 308n.6

prisoners’ escape following death of, 248, 249nn.8–9, 307

receipt of money upon a capias, 273, 273n.1, 275, 307

taking of clothing, 283, 284n.7, 307, 308n.2

taking of goods/chattel on fieri facias, 283, 284n.7, 307, 308n.1

ships/freight

bound as security for repairs, 265, 266n.7

insurance of, 143–44nn.3–4, 143n.1, 144nn.8–10, 145, 145nn.1–4

Short v. Maynard, 245, 246n.11

Shower’s Reports, 203, 204n.8, 263n.3, 287, 288n.15

Sir Henry Hobart’s Reports. See Hobart’s Reports

Sir Hugh Cholmley’s Case, 206n.4

Sir John Lade v. Shepherd, 232n.4

Sir Richard Pexhall’s Case, 289, 290n.6

Skinner’s Case, 57, 172, 173n.3

Skip v. Hook, 190n.8

Slade’s Case, 188n.10

slander/libel, 248, 248n.2

Slater v. Swann, 231n.3

slaves, 52, 52n.151, 53–54

Smith v. Parkhurst, 240n.8

Socratic method, 8, 10, 27–28

soldier’s liability for injury from accidental musket discharge, 278n.10

sole-trading, 131n.5

South Africa, 357

South Carolina, 41

Southern Journal (JQ), 5, 12, 41, 75, 430–31

Sower v. Bradfield, 114n.7

Spanaw v. Caruthers, 144n.6

Spirit of the Laws (Montesquieu), 62–63, 64, 177n.2

spitting in someone’s face, 281, 297

Springett v. Chadwick, 252, 253–54n.11, 293, 293n.1

Squire v. Grevett, 115, 116nn.6–7

St. German, Christopher: Doctor and Student, 33n.66, 92, 95–96n.1, 371n.4, 392

St. John v. Diggs, 268n.3

Stamma v. Brown, 143n.3

Stamp Act (1765), 35, 36, 63–65

Staple v. Heydon, 255–56n.1

Statute of Frauds, 135–36n.3

statutes/acts, 215–30

in abridgment of rights, 223–24n.3

actions implied by prohibitions in, 275, 276n.6

acts of Parliament, 219, 221, 222n.4, 255, 256n.5, 303 (see also under common law)

common law altered by, 67–68, 223

construction of, 219

equity of, 66–67, 215, 222n.7

of explanation, 223, 223n.1

intent/spirit vs. letter of the law, 215, 217, 219, 225, 227, 229–30, 230n.1

interpretation of, 66, 215–25, 220n.2, 220n.8, 222nn.5–7, 229, 229n.2

JQ’s sources for, 66–68

and legislative intent, 69, 70–72, 341n.4

Levitical Degrees incorporated in, 267, 268n.4

“may be done”‘s meaning in, 261, 299

mischief remedied by, 66–67, 71–72, 215, 216n.4, 219, 223

and orders of laws, 62–63

penal, 67

preambles of, 219, 219n

proofs/arguments from, 87

Statute of Gloucester, 217, 218n.3, 219, 220n.4

Statute of Merton, 221

and use/experience, 221, 222n.5

See also laws; Legis Miscellanea

Stephenson v. Holditch, 106, 106nn.1–2

Story, Joseph

on commonplacing, 28

at Harvard Law School, 7–8, 7n.11, 27, 30

law school curriculum envisioned by, 74–75

legal education of, 3, 28–30

as Supreme Court Justice, 7, 30

Story v. Atkins, 188n.11

Strange, Sir John, 56, 110n.2

Strange’s Reports, 145n.4

Andrews v. Franklin, 187n.2

Ashley v. Ashley, 240n.9

Bailee v. Vivash, 232n.6

Barfoot v. Reynolds, 110–11n.14

Beardesley v. Baldwin, 187n.3

Bowyer v. Bampton, 190n.6

Boyfield v. Brown, 143n.2

Bromley v. Frazier, 189n.3

Campbell v. Bordieis, 145n.3

Collins v. Butler, 189n.1

Cooke v. Colehan, 187n.4

Cumber v. Wane, 253n.11, 293, 293n.1

Dean v. Dicker, 144n.10

Dick v. Barsell, 144n.8

Dominus Rex v. Bennett, 147n.2

Elton v. Brogden, 145n.2

Foster v. Wilmer, 144n.9

Gordon v. Morley, 145n.3

Grammer et al. v. Nixon, 110n.13

Green v. Brown, 144n.5

Hoar v. Dacosta, 188n.9

Jarvis v. Hayes, 111n.15

Jefferies v. Austin, 188n.8

Kellock v. Robinson, 190n.7

Knight v. Cambridge, 143n.1

Lawrence v. Jacob, 189n.3

Leglise v. Champante, 232n.5

Lekeux v. Nash, 147nn.3–4

Martin v. Chauntry, 188n.6

Mead v. Hamond, 110n.12

Morris v. Lee, 188n.5

“new trial” cases in, 239, 239n.2

Poplewell v. Wilson, 188n.7

Rex v. Nixon, 246n.10

Reynolds v. Clarke, 231n.2

Robinson v. Stone, 190n.5

Seaman v. Fonereau, 144n.4

Searle v. Lord Barrington, 279, 280n.5

Sir John Lade v. Shepherd, 232n.4

Slater v. Swann, 231n.3

Smith v. Parkhurst, 240n.8

Spanaw v. Caruthers, 144n.6

Stamma v. Brown, 143n.3

Story v. Atkins, 188n.11

Syderbottom v. Smith, 189n.1

Tonge v. Watts, 145n.1

Underwood v. Hewson, 231nn.1–2

Wapler v. Eames, 144n.7

Wegersloffe v. Keene, 245, 246–47n.13

Strode v. Berager, 287, 288n.5

Student’s Companion (Jacob), 89, 91n.7

Style’s Reports, 115, 116n.6

Sullivan, Francis Stoughton: A Plan for the Study of the Feudal and English Laws in the University of Dublin, 19, 21

Summary of the Pleas of the Crown (Historia Placitorum Coronae; Hale), 24, 286n.5

A Supplement to the Office and Duty of Executors (Curson), 92

Swinburne, H.: Brief Treatise of Testaments and Last Wills, 239, 240n.13, 269, 270n.4

Syderbottom v. Smith, 189n.1

Symboleography (West), 114n.2, 114n.10, 393n.6

Tampion v. Newson and Bridget his Wife, 131n.3

tax acts, 69–70

tenants

joint, 255, 261, 289, 289n.3, 290n.5, 301, 310, 311n.9, 317, 317n.1

for life, 127, 128n.5, 319

releases by, 203, 204n.8, 305

in tail, 265–66n.1, 279, 287, 299, 305, 306n.15

tenancy in common, 305, 306n.16, 317, 317n.5

for years, 320, 320n.1, 320n.3, 320nn.6–7

tenements. See lands/tenements/hereditaments

Les Termes de la Ley (Rastell), 89, 91n.4, 103–4n.2

testaments. See under Latin Maxims

testators. See wills

Thacher, Oxenbridge, 2, 21, 21n.42, 27, 69–70, 71–72, 76–77 (table)

Theory of Evidence (Bathurst), 138n.6

Thomas, Clarence, 61n.191

Thompson v. Hervey, 131n.10

Thompson v. Leach, 256n.12

Three Law Tracts (Coke), 394

Tobin, Susannah B., 31

“To his Nephew, Directions for beginning the Study of Law” (T. Reeve), 22, 26, 27, 89, 89n, 90, 91n.1

Tonge v. Watts, 145n.1

Tories, 182n.4

torts. See account; assumpsit; battery; contract, by accord; obligation and deed; trespass; usury; words, actionable or not

Tracy v. Smith, 273, 274n.5

Tracy v. Veal, 110n.9

Transylvania University Law Department (Lexington, Ky.), 4n.4

A Treatise of the Principall Grounds and Maximes of the Lawes of this Kingdome (Noy), 33–34n.66, 92, 93n.4, 108n.5

Treby, Sir George, 69, 230

trees, grant of, 257, 275, 276n.3, 299, 300

Tremenhere v. Tresilian, 102, 102nn.1–2

trespass, 74

ab initio, 279, 280n.10, 281, 282n.4, 307

accord plea in, 103, 114n.4

cases/types of, 231–32nn.1–6, 256n.1

and claiming a way, 255–56n.1, 301, 307

debt upon judgment in, 250, 251n.10

definition of, 307

general issue plead in, 191, 303

indebitatus assumpsit for, 134n.3

not guilty plea in, 191, 196, 197n.6

release of multiple trespassers, 250, 305

replevy of goods taken during, 279, 280n.9

trials, 74

at bar, 307, 308n.6

Coke on the purpose of, 193n.4, 195n.4

by jury, 61, 61nn.191–92, 146, 147n.9, 148, 172, 174

new, 60, 239, 239n.2, 240n.4, 240n.6, 240nn.8–9, 263, 264n.1, 307

nisi prius, 307, 308n.6

Trials Per Pais (Duncombe), 159, 159n.2, 162n.5, 280n.5

Trials Per Pais (Euer), 415n.4

trover, 49, 49n.132, 259, 260n.12, 271, 272n.7, 275, 281, 307, 308nn.9–10

tryals. See trials

Underwood v. Hewson, 231nn.1–2

usury, 74, 245, 246n.4, 307

value determined by appraisement vs. jury, 269, 295

Van Muyden, Johannes: Compendiosa

Institutionum Justiniani Tractatio, 32n.64, 322

variance, 58, 74, 250, 307

Vattel, Emmerich de, 181–82n.2

Vaughan, Sir John: Reports and Arguments in the Common Pleas, 67–68, 161n.2, 222n.4, 224nn.5–6

venter (womb; mother), 151, 152n.11, 153

Ventris Reports, 250, 251n.10, 262n.9, 284n.8, 381n, 383n.1, 383n.4

Vernon’s Case, 104n.3

Vernon’s Reports, 106nn.1–2, 262n.11

vexation, sueing for, 271

Viner, Charles, 110n.2

A General Abridgment of the Law and Equity, 30, 102n.2, 106nn.1–5, 148n.3

Vinnius, Arnoldus, 238n.5

commentary on Justinian’s Institutes, 347

Compendiosa institutionum Justiniana tractatiae, 32n.64

Partitionum Juris Civilis, 357

Vulgate, 84n.1

Vynior’s Case, 115n.1

Wales, 95

wapentake (county district), 95, 96n.3

Wapler v. Eames, 144n.7

Ward v. Evans, 254n.11

warrant of record vs. warrant in law, 275, 297

warranty, 307, 309

Warren, Charles, 4–5nn.4–5

Warren v. Consett, 254n.11

Watson v. Thorpe and his Wife, 131n.3

way

claimed, 255–56n.1, 301, 307

not repaired, 252, 301, 307

Weaver v. Ward, 277, 278n.10

Webster, Daniel, 76–77 (table)

Wegersloffe v. Keene, 245, 246–47n.13

welfare law, 38

welfare of the people, as supreme law, 81, 81n.2

West, William: Symboleography, 114n.2, 114n.10, 393n.6

Westby’s Case, 248, 249n.9

Westminster Hall (London), 308n.6

Whelpdale’s Case, 197n.4, 255, 256n.11, 277–78n.1

Whigs, 182n.4

Whitesell, David R., 439

Wilkes, John, 184n

William & Mary 4 (1692), 43n.102

wills

copies of probates of, 137

debts raised by, 261

distribution of property of intestate, 242n.5

and dower, 317

dum sola, 297, 298n.9

execors/co-execors (executors/co-executors) of, 141, 142n.3, 165

by executory devise vs. remainder, 261, 300

making of, 135, 135n.2

and memory/sanity of the testator, 239, 240n.14

minutes relative to, 239

woman’s, countermanded by her later marriage, 261–62n.1

See also legacy

Wilson, D. L., 6n

Wilson, James, 20, 27

Wilson’s Reports, 68, 226n.3, 227n.1, 229n.2

wine seizure, 231, 232n.5

witnesses. See evidence

wives. See Baron and Feme; marriage

Wolferstan v. Bishop of Lincoln, 226n.3, 227n.1

women’s rights

Brashford v. Buckingham and his wife, 46–47, 250, 251nn.8–9

marital subordination, 44, 45–48

number of Christian names permitted, 283, 284n.12

unmarried women, 50–51

Wood, Thomas

A New Institute of the Imperial or Civil Law, 33n.65, 51, 343

See also An Institute of the Laws of England

words

actionable or not, 74, 307

ambiguity of, 138n.6

constructions of, 299

slanderous/libelous, 248, 248n.2

used to release, 201, 202n.4, 212, 213nn.3–4

See also under Latin Maxims

Worth v. Diner, 109, 110n.2

writings/deeds. See under Latin Maxims

Writ of Covenant, 191, 192n.2

Writ of Error, 46, 174, 175n.5, 187n.4, 198n, 250, 251n.6, 285, 285n

Writ of Formedon, 154n.9

Writ of Mort D’ancestor, 191, 192n.3

Writ of Right, 125, 191, 417n.9

Writ of View, 288n.5

writs

as amendable, 285, 286n.2, 307

capias, 273, 273n.1, 275

errors in, 307

execution of, 255, 307

executor not named in the writ, plea of, 267, 268n.6

returnable on a Sunday, 257, 258n.11, 307

testing of, 271, 272n.5, 295, 295n

wrongdoers. See under Latin Maxims

Wythe, George, 3–4n.3, 19–20

Yale Law School (New Haven, Conn.), 3

Yates, Frances A.: The Art of Memory, 323

Yearbooks, 161–62n.3

Zenger, Peter, 150n.2