Englands compleat law-judge, and lawyer: declared in these ensuing heads: 1. Whether that law, and those judges and practizers, owned time out of mind by the supreme authority of the nation, be not the laws, judges, and lawyers of this Commonwealth, &c. 2. Whether courts so constituted are not records of the nation? 3. Whether each court hath not power, as such, to enforce its own decrees. 4. That the decrees and usages of such a court are as valid as of any court. 5. Whether it be not against reason, that when divers courts in the same nation act by divers lawes, one of the courts should have power to prohibit the other to proceed to bring the matters in difference before it self. 6. Concerning judges of appeal
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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cock, Charles George (Author)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: London Printed for Edmund Paxton at Pauls-Chaine over against the Castle-Taverne 1655
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Online Access:BSB01
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Item Description:Annotation on Thomason copy: "March 15"; also the last number of the imprint date has been marked through and replaced with a "5". - Reproduction of the original in the British Library. - Sometimes attributed to: Theophilus Philopatros (i.e. Thomas Paget), who signed the dedication. - Thomason, E.870[3]
Physical Description:Online-Ressource

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