A Compendious View of the Civil Law, and of the Law of the Admiralty: Being the Substance of a Course of Lectures Read in the University of Dublin, Volume 1 |
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Page vii
... Wife CHAPTER II . Hufband and Wife continued 1431 PAGR 1 21 49 82 CHAPTER III . Mafter and Servant Father and Son CHAPTER. OF THE RIGHTS OF PERSONS :
... Wife CHAPTER II . Hufband and Wife continued 1431 PAGR 1 21 49 82 CHAPTER III . Mafter and Servant Father and Son CHAPTER. OF THE RIGHTS OF PERSONS :
Page 24
... wife was fufficiently fecured by fettlements in fome measure refembling ours , but the marriage chain was of the moft diffoluble texture , and broken on the flighteft caufes . Cohabitation dur- ing the period of one year , conftituted a ...
... wife was fufficiently fecured by fettlements in fome measure refembling ours , but the marriage chain was of the moft diffoluble texture , and broken on the flighteft caufes . Cohabitation dur- ing the period of one year , conftituted a ...
Page 40
... wife , rea- fonable , falutary , or neceffary , has been matter of much celebrated controverfy between contend- ing abilities of the first rank , and is a queftion fpread over fields of argument infinitely too fpa- cious for the range ...
... wife , rea- fonable , falutary , or neceffary , has been matter of much celebrated controverfy between contend- ing abilities of the first rank , and is a queftion fpread over fields of argument infinitely too fpa- cious for the range ...
Page 49
... WIFE . THOSE branches of the civil law , to which modern inftitutions bear no analogy , and which therefore only ... wife , the contract of mar- VOL . I. E 50 ON THE RIGHTS [ Book I. riage . In BOOK I OF THE RIGHTS OF PERSONS: CHAPTER I ...
... WIFE . THOSE branches of the civil law , to which modern inftitutions bear no analogy , and which therefore only ... wife , the contract of mar- VOL . I. E 50 ON THE RIGHTS [ Book I. riage . In BOOK I OF THE RIGHTS OF PERSONS: CHAPTER I ...
Page 50
... wife a mutual participation of benefits and right ; it was therefore defined , omnis vitæ con- fortium , humani & Divini Juris communicatio . I do not mean that the Romans omitted all re- ligious rites on the perfection of this contract ...
... wife a mutual participation of benefits and right ; it was therefore defined , omnis vitæ con- fortium , humani & Divini Juris communicatio . I do not mean that the Romans omitted all re- ligious rites on the perfection of this contract ...
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A Compendious View of the Civil Law and of the Law of the Admiralty: Being ... Arthur Browne No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
action adminiſtration affigned againſt alfo alſo anfwer becauſe Blackstone cafe canon canon law caſe caufe cauſe civil law Code common law confent confequence confideration confidered conftitution contract corporations court courts of equity debts defcent diftinction ecclefiaftical eftate England Engliſh eſtate exprefs faid fame father fays fecond feems fentence fervices fhall fhew fhould fince firft firſt flave folemn fome fometimes fpecial fpecies ftate ftatute fubject fuch fufficient fuit fuppofed guardian heir himſelf houſe huſband Inft inftance Inftitutes intereft Ireland judge Juftinian lands leafes legacy Lord Lord Mansfield mafter marriage moft mortgage mortis caufa moſt muft muſt neceffary obferved occafion Pandects party perfons poffeffion prefent puniſhed purpoſe queftion reafon refpect requifite Roman law Rome rule ſhall ſtate ſuch teftament thefe themſelves theſe things thofe thoſe tion truft twelve tables ufually univerfally unleſs uſe vifitor wife witneffes
Popular passages
Page 342 - or any claufe thereof, {hall be revocable, otherwife than by fome other will or codicil in writing, or other writing declaring the fame ; or by burning, cancelling, tearing or obliterating the fame by the teftator
Page 342 - by fome other will or codicil in writing, or other writing of the devifor, figned in the prefence of three or four witnefles declaring the fame.
Page 343 - by word of mouth only, except the fame be in the life of the teftator committed to writing, and after the writing thereof, read unto the teftator and allowed by him, and proved
Page 185 - and the road was out of repair, he who had the right of way might go over any part of the land he pleafed
Page 342 - and bequefts of lands and tenements ihall remain and continue in force, until the fame be burnt, cancelled, torn, or obliterated by the teftator, or by his
Page 70 - of them, is diftant from the common anceftor, that is the degree in which they are related to each other.
Page 75 - 2. Let every man have his own wife, and every woman her own