200 
Indiana University Studies 
b. American and English Encyclopedia of Law (2d ed., 1896- 
1905), published in 30 volumes and index, with a five-' 
volume supplement (1905-1908), covering substantive law 
and evidence. 
c. Encyclopedia of Pleading and Practice (1895-1902), published 
in 22 volumes and index, with a four-volume supplement 
(1903-1909), treating procedural law in such a manner 
that, in combination with the second edition of American 
and English Encyclopedia of Law, the whole field of law 
was covered. 
d. Encyclopedia of Forms and Precedents (1896-1904), pub- 
lished in 18 volumes. 
e. American and English Encyclopedia of Law and Practice. 
Publication was begun in 1900 but only 5 volumes covering 
A to Assignment were produced. 
/. Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure. Cyc (1901-1912) , published 
in 40 volumes. Cumulative Annual Supplements have been 
issued since 1901. 
g. Corpus Juris. This is really a new edition of Cyc but on 
the whole much better done. Publication was begun 
in 1914; 33 volumes have been produced, and it is an- 
nounced that it will be completed in 70 volumes. Supple- 
mentary volumes are issued periodically to keep the cita- 
tions up to date and to permit necessary additions to the 
text. 
h. Standard Encyclopedia of Procedure (1911-1922), published 
in 26 volumes. Periodical supplements are issued. 
i. Encyclopedia of Evidence (1902-1909), published in 14 vol- 
umes. One-volume supplement in 1919. 
j. Ruling Case Law (1914-1921), published in 28 volumes, with 
a four-volume supplement (1921-1923). Its publishers as- 
sert it to be “at once a digest of particular reports and 
a compendium of the entire body of the law as developed 
by United States Supreme Court Reports, Lawyers’ Edi- 
tion, American Law Reports Annotated, Lawyers’ Reports 
Annotated, American Decisions, American Reports, Ameri- 
can State Reports, American and English Annotated Cases, 
American Annotated Cases, English Ruling Cases, and 
British Ruling Cases”. As a cyclopedic digest of the re- 
ports named, it is valuable and useful in that it makes 
largely unnecessary the handling of the digests of the 
separate sets. As “a compendium of the entire body of the 
law, etc.,” it is of comparatively small value and is to be 
used with caution. 
2. English Encyclopedias. 
a. Encyclopedia of the Laws of England (1st ed., 1897-1898), 
published in 12 volumes, with a one-volume supplement in 
1903. It is a mere cyclopedic digest. 
