THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 



LAW. 



THE INFLUENCE OF THE ROMAN LAW ON 

 THE LAW OF ENGLAND. By T. E. SCRUTTON, M.A. Demy 

 8vo. \In the Press. 



AN ANALYSIS OF CRIMINAL LIABILITY. By E. C. 

 CLARK, LL.D., Regius Professor of Civil Law in the University of Cam- 

 bridge, also of Lincoln's Inn, Barrister-at-Law. Crown 8vo. 75. 6d. 



"Prof. Clark's little book is the substance Students of jurisprudence will find much to 



of lectures delivered by him upon those ppr- interest and instruct them in the work of Prof. 



tions of Austin's work on jurisprudence which Clark." Athenceum. 

 deal with the "operation of sanctions" . . . 



PRACTICAL JURISPRUDENCE, a Comment on AUSTIN. 

 By E. C. CLARK, LL.D. Regius Professor of Civil Law. Crown 

 8vo. s. , 



"Damit schliesst dieses inhaltreiche und 

 nach alien Seiten anregende Buch iiber Prac- 



tical Jurisprudence." Konig. Centtalblattfii 

 Rechtswissenschaft. 



A SELECTION OF THE STATE TRIALS. By J. W. 



WILLIS-BUND, M.A., LL.B., Barrister-at-Law, Professor of Con- 

 stitutional Law and History, University College, London. Crown 

 8vo. Vols. I. and II. In 3 parts. Now reduced to 30-$-. (originally 

 published at 46^.) 



"Mr Willis-Bund has edited 'A Selection of 

 Cases from the State Trials' which is likely to 

 form a very valuable addition to the standard 

 literature . . . There can be no doubt, therefore, 

 of the interest that can be found in the State 

 trials. But they are large and unwieldy, and it 

 is impossible for the general reader to come 

 across them. Mr Willis-Bund has therefore 

 done good service in making a selection that 

 is in the first volume reduced to a commodious 

 form." The Examiner. 



"This work is a very useful contribution to 

 that important branch of the constitutional his- 

 tory of England which is concerned with the 

 growth and development of the law of treason, 

 as it may be gathered from trials before the 

 ordinary courts, The author has very wisely 

 distinguished these cases from those of im- 

 peachment for treason before Parliament, which 

 he proposes to treat in a future volume under 

 the general head ' Proceedings in Parliament.'" 

 The A cademy. 



" This is a work of such obvious utility that 

 the only wonder is that no one should have un- 

 dertaken it before ... In many respects there- 

 fore, although the trials are more or less 

 abridged, this is for the ordinary student's pur- 

 pose not only a more handy, but a more useful 



work than Howell's." Saturday Review. 



" But, although the book is most interesting 

 to the historian of constitutional law, it is also 

 not without considerable value to those who 

 seek information with regard to procedure and 

 the growth of the law of evidence. We should 

 add that Mr Willis-Bund has given short pre- 

 faces and appendices to the trials, so as to form 

 a connected narrative of the events in history 

 to which they relate. We can thoroughly re- 

 commend the book. " Law Times. 



"To a large class of readers Mr Willis- 

 Bund's compilation will thus be of great as- 

 sistance, for he presents in a convenient form a 

 judicious selection of the principal statutes and 

 the leading cases bearing on the crime of trea- 

 son . . . For all classes of readers these volumes 

 possess an indirect interest, arising from the 

 nature of the cases themselves, from the men 

 who were actors in them, and from the numerous 

 points of social life which are incidentally illus- 

 trated in the course of the trials. On these 

 features we have not dwelt, but have preferred 

 to show that the book is a valuable contribution 

 to the study of the subject with which it pro- 

 fesses to deal, namely, the history of the law of 

 treason." A t/tenceum. 



Vol. III. In the Press. 



THE FRAGMENTS OF THE PERPETUAL EDICT 



OF SALVIUS JULIANUS, collected, arranged, and annotated by 

 BRYAN WALKER, M.A., LL.D., Law Lecturer of St John's College, and 

 late Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Crown 8vo. 6s. 



" In the present book we have the fruits of 

 the same kind of thorough and well-ordered 

 study which was brought to bear upon the notes 

 to the Commentaries and the Institutes . . . 

 Hitherto the Edict has been almost inac- 

 cessible to the ordinary English student, and 



such a student will be interested as well as per- 

 haps surprised to find how abundantly the ex- 

 tant fragments illustrate and clear up points 

 which have attracted his attention in the Com- 

 mentaries, or the Institutes, or the Digest." 

 Law Times. 



London : C. J. CLA Y &* SON, Cambridge University Press Warehouse^ 

 Ave Mariii Lane. 



