A Concise History of the Common Law. Theodore F. T. Plucknett

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу A Concise History of the Common Law - Theodore F. T. Plucknett страница 2

A Concise History of the Common Law - Theodore F. T. Plucknett

Скачать книгу

rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_a03923cc-4984-5302-8885-91c842b0100c">CHAPTER 3. PLEADING

       PART II CRIME AND TORT

       CHAPTER 1. CRIMINAL PROCEDURE

       CHAPTER 2. THE FELONIES

       CHAPTER 3. MISDEMEANOURS, TRESPASS AND TORT

       CHAPTER 4. LIABILITY, CIVIL AND CRIMINAL

       CHAPTER 5. DEFAMATION

       PART III REAL PROPERTY

       CHAPTER 1. FEUDALISM

       CHAPTER 2. FEUDALISM IN ENGLAND

       CHAPTER 3. INHERITANCE AND ALIENABILITY

       CHAPTER 4. TENURES AND INCIDENTS

       CHAPTER 5. THE RISE OF THE ENTAIL

       CHAPTER 6. THE COMMON LAW ESTATES DOWN TO 1540

       CHAPTER 7. USES AND THE STATUTE

       CHAPTER 8. THE LATER LAW OF REAL PROPERTY

       CHAPTER 9. THE MORTGAGE

       CHAPTER 10. CONVEYANCES

       PART IV CONTRACT

       CHAPTER 1. ORIGINS

       CHAPTER 2. THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY

       CHAPTER 3. ASSUMPSIT TO SLADE’S CASE

       CHAPTER 4. CONTRACT AFTER SLADE’S CASE

       CHAPTER 5. LAW MERCHANT AND ADMIRALTY

       PART V EQUITY

       CHAPTER 1. THE EARLY HISTORY OF EQUITY

       CHAPTER 2. THE FORMATIVE PERIOD

       CHAPTER 3. THE WORK OF THE CHANCELLORS

       PART VI SUCCESSION

       CHAPTER 1. INHERITANCE

       CHAPTER 2. INTESTACY

       CHAPTER 3. WILLS

       INDEX

      THE decision of the publishers to reprint this work in a larger type will have made it easier for the reader to use it, I hope; it has also made it possible to effect a good deal of revision. No new subjects have been added, however, for the object of the work has always been to treat only a limited number of topics, but with sufficient detail to make them intelligible. This has made it necessary to place the history of English law in its setting of canon, civil, and general European law in order to show the intellectual influences which have moulded our own system. Comparison with other legal systems is therefore essential to the method here pursued. The point of view adopted throughout is that of a historian who surveys the law from the outside, as it were, and contributes both comparison and criticism to the historical study contained in the following pages.

      Besides a few additions (which are distributed fairly evenly through the book), there have been numerous revisions, occasionally rearrangements (especially in dealing with the jury), and sometimes a more ample explanation of difficult points.

      The general plan of the work remains unchanged. The first half of the book is an historical introduction to the study of law, and stress has therefore been placed upon those conditions in political, economic, social and religious thought which have contributed to its formation. As the readers for whom this part is designed will generally be first-year undergraduates, it seemed prudent to assume that their previous knowledge of history would be by no means extensive; hence the distinctly elementary note of the first eighty pages.

      The courts, the profession, and such general factors in legal development as legislation and the principle of precedent, are subjects which deserve close attention at the introductory stage, for they are the foundation of much that follows. It would, no doubt, be possible to state the essential facts in a very condensed form by using an encyclopaedic style, but such a treatment is not very helpful to beginners. Enough illustrative material has therefore been used to give, I hope, some of the spirit and atmosphere in which the common law system grew up.

      The place of legal history in the law school curriculum is still a matter of debate. It may be remarked, however, that if law is a difficult study to the beginner, the history of the law, with its different outlook and unfamiliar concepts, is apt to be more difficult still. This book has therefore been planned on the principle that the first part, “A General Survey of Legal History,” is as much legal history as a first-year student can be expected to master, in view of the fact that he is embarking upon a subject for which his earlier studies have given him little preparation. At a later stage he can embark upon legal history in more detail, either as a separate subject, or as part of the study of substantive law.

      The second half of the book, therefore, consists of introductions to the history of a few of the main divisions of the law. Other

Скачать книгу