Page:The American Jurist and Law Magazine, Volume 1, 1829.pdf/12

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CONTENTS

OF

No. II.


Art. Page.

I. Jackson on Real Actions . . . . 185
A Treatise on the Pleadings and Practice in Real Actions; with Precedents of Pleadings. By Charles Jackson .
II. Prosecutions Against Animals . . . 223
III. Judge Story's Argument . . . . 237
Outlines prepared for an Argument to be delivered before the Board of Overseers of Harvard College, upon the Discussion of the Memorial of the Professors and Tutors of the College, claiming a right that none but resident Instructers in the College should be deemed or chosen 'Fellows' of the Corporation;the substance of which was spoken before the Board at their Meeting in January, 1825. By Joseph Story, one of the Members of the Board.
IV. Trial by Jury . . . . . . 274
A Treatise on the Law and Practice of Juries as amended by the Statute of 6 Geo. IV. c. 50, including the Coroner's Inquest, &c. By James Kennedy.
V. Fugitives from Justice . . . . 297
VI. Brougham's Speech . . . . . 310
Present State of the Law. The Speech of Henry Brougham, in the House of Commons, on Thursday, February 17, 1828, on his motion, 'that an humble Address be presented to his Majesty, praying that he will graciously be pleased to issue a Commission for inquiring into the Defects occasioned by time and otherwise in the Laws of this Realm, and into the Measures necessary for removing the same.'
VII. Story's edition of Abbott on Shipping . 321
A Treatise of the Law relative to Merchant Shipping and Seamen. By Charles Abbott. Edited by John Henry Abbott. Fourth American from the fifth