J. 112
Placita generalia & specialia.
8
vo.
1815 Catalogue, page 78. no. 44, as above.
Placita generalia specialia. In an exact collection of the most usefull and necessary presidents of declarations, plaints,
demurrers, pleas in barr, abatement and disability, issues, verdicts, judgments by confession, and after verdict: with variety
of process relating thereunto. Together with the stiles and forms of entring pleadings as well in superiour courts, as inferiour,
and limited jurisdictions . . .
London: Printed for
Charles Harper, and
John Amery, and are to be sold by
George Marriott,
1674.
Law 310
First Edition. 8vo. 364 leaves, publisher’s advertisement on the verso of the last leaf.
Not in Marvin.
Sweet & Maxwell II, 80, 89.
STC P2334.
Rebound in sheep; many leaves dampstained. Initialled by Jefferson at sig. I and T.
Peyton Randolph Esq
re 1755
written on the fly-leaf; a corner of the title-page with a written name torn away, a manuscript note on page 219 in an early hand.
Formerly in the collection of Peyton Randolph.
[1904]
J. 113
Herne’s pleader.
fol.
1815 Catalogue, page 76. no. 227, as above.
HERNE,
John.
The Pleader: containing perfect presidents and formes of declarations, pleadings, issues, judgments, and proceedings, in all
kinds of actions, reall, personall, and mixt; very necessary to be known, and of excellent use. Together with the termes and
rolls wherein they were entred; and also diverse points of great learning, and various Notes and cases to illustrate the same.
As they were drawn, entred, and taken in the times of those famous prothonotaries of the Court of Common Pleas, Richard Brovvnlovv,
Robert Moyle, John Gulston, Thomas Cory, Esq
rs . . . By John Herne. With exact alphabeticall tables of all the principall matters therein contained.
London: Printed for
Henry Twyford,
Thomas Dring, and
Timothy Twyford,
1657.
Law 248
First Edition. 384 leaves in fours and two; black letter.
STC H1574.
Marvin, page 383.
Sweet & Maxwell I, 182, 28.
Calf, rebacked and repaired, with the Library of Congress 1815 bookplate preserved and inlaid in the new endpapers.
Hern
s Plea
written in ink on the fore-edge. Initialled by Jefferson at sig. I and T; errors in the paging corrected in an early hand; some leaves foxed.
John Herne, fl. 1600, entered Lincoln’s Inn in February 1635. He was the son of John Herne, counsel for Prynne, Archbishop Laud and
others.
[1905]
J. 114
Sheppard’s precedents.
8
vo.
1815 Catalogue, page 79. no. 45, as above.
SHEPPARD,
William.
The President of Presidents. Or, one general president for all common assurances by deeds: being a perfect abstract of the
general learning and forms of presidents, touching or any ways relating to all manner of conveyances now in use. First