Foreign Companies and other Corporations. By 



E. Hilton Young, ALA., of the Inner Temple and Oxfoi^d 

 Circuit, Barrister-at-Law, City Editor of The Morning 

 Post. 



Demy 8vo. Cloth, pp. .\ii + 332. Price \zs. 



Extract from the Preface 

 In the year 1904 it fell to my lot to give some consideration 

 to the case of Risdon Iron Works v. Furness (p. 185 post). 

 Search for authority about the knotty points involved showed 

 how little consideration had been given to them in this country. 

 These pages, the outcome of that search, are an attempt rather 

 to open up the subject to discussion than to provide a full or 

 final solution. 



CONTENTS , ; ■ ■; 



Part I -n;;: / :.:\3 :•. - 



The Juristic Person in Private International Law 



Introductory — Status — Capacity — Nationality and Domicile 



Part II 

 Foreign Companies and other Corporations in English Law 

 General Principles 



Status and Capacities — Residence and Domicile — Statutory Regulations — 

 Service of Process — Liquidation — Revenue — Patents and Trade Marks — 

 Transfer of Shares — Foreign Sovereigns, States and Governments 

 Appendix 



A History of the American Bar. By Charles Warren, 

 of the Boston Bar. 



Demy 8vo. Cloth, pp. xii + 586. Price 16^. net. 

 Extract fro7n the Preface 



This work is not a law book for those who wish to study 

 law, but an historical sketch for those who wish to know 

 something about the men who have composed the American 

 Bar in the past, and about the influences which produced the 

 great American lawyers. 



Part I deals with the legal conditions in each of the 

 American Colonies during the 17th and i8th centuries, prior 

 to the American Revolution, the status of the Common Law 

 as applied by the courts, the method of appointment of the 

 courts, the leading lawyers, legislation regarding the legal 

 profession, etc. 



Part 1 1 portrays the growth of the American Bar from the 

 foundation of the Supreme Court to i860. ."• .,.,oil 



