Page:Dictionary of National Biography. Sup. Vol I (1901).djvu/117

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Archbold
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Archbold

all the statutes, adjudged cases, and other authorities upon the subject. This was one of three volumes of ‘A Digest of Criminal Law,’ which Archbold had prepared for the press, but as several books on the subject appeared about the same time he did not issue the other two volumes.

In 1819 he published the first edition of what was perhaps his most notable work, ‘The Practice of the Court of King’s Bench in Personal Actions and Ejectments’ (London, 2 vols. 12mo). Previous to its appearance, ‘The Practice of the Court of King’s Bench in Personal Actions,’ by William Tidd [q. v.], was the leading work on the subject; but, while it maintained its place in the United States, it was largely superseded in England by Archbold’s book, which was more explicit in regard to forms of procedure. Archbold’s ‘Practice’ went through fourteen editions. The third edition was edited by Thomas Chitty [q. v.], who added to it the ‘Practice of the Courts of Common Pleas and Exchequer,’ and the ninth edition, which appeared in 1855–6, was edited by Samuel Prentice. The fourteenth edition, published in 1885, was revised by Thomas Willes Chitty and John William St. Lawrance Leslie.

About 1824 Archbold published his ‘Summary of the Law relative to Pleading and Evidence in Criminal Cases,’ in which he incorporated the greater part of the two unpublished volumes of his ‘Digest of Criminal Law.’ The fourth (1831) and four succeeding editions were edited by (Sir) John Jervis [q.v.], the tenth (1846) to the fifteenth (1862) by William Newland Welsby [q. v.], and the sixteenth (1867) to the twenty-first (1893) by William Bruce. The twenty-second edition, by William Feilden Craies and Guy Stephenson, appeared in 1900. The work has also gone through several editions in the United States.

In 1829 Archbold published a work upon the ‘Practice of the Court of Common Pleas.’ Afterwards the practice of all the courts of common law at Westminster was assimilated, and much altered by the statutes and new rules on the subject between 1831 and 1884. To meet the altered conditions he prepared his ‘New Practice of Attornies in the Courts of Law at Westminster,’ which appeared in 1838, was remodelled in 1844, and reached a third edition in 1846–7 (London, 2 vols. 8vo). On the passage of the Common Law Procedure Act in 1862 he prepared ‘The New Rules of Practice in the Courts of Law’ (London, 1853, 8vo), and ‘The New Practice, Pleadings, and Evidence in the Courts of Common Law at Westminster’ (London, 1853, 12mo), which received a supplement in 1854, and attained a second edition in 1855 (London, 8vo).

Archbold’s treatises on parish law were among his most important elucidations of English law. In 1828 he published ‘The Law relative to Commitments and Convictions by Justices of the Peace’ (London, 12mo). This was the foundation of his ‘Justice of the Peace and Parish Officer’ (London, 1840, 3 vols. 12mo), a work intended as a practical guide for county magistrates. The similar treatise by Richard Burn [q. v.] had become, through the additions of successive editors, rather a work of reference for lawyers than a guide for magistrates. A seventh edition of Archbold’s work by James Paterson appeared in 1876 (London, 2 vols. 8vo). The third volume of the original edition, which dealt with ‘The Poor Law,’ was in especial demand, and developed into a separate treatise, which has remained a standard authority on the subject; the twelfth (1873), thirteenth (1878), and fourteenth (1885) editions of the volume on ‘The Poor Law’ were prepared by William Cunningham Glen, and the fifteenth (1898) by James Brooke Little. Archbold’s latest contribution to parish law was ‘The Parish Officer’ (London, 1852, 12mo); a second edition by Glen appeared in 1855. With the fourth edition (1864) the editor, James Paterson, incorporated Shaw’s ‘Parish Law’ [see Shaw, Joseph]. The eighth edition, by John Theodore Dodd, appeared in 1895.

Archbold died on 28 Nov. 1870, at 15 Gloucester Street, Regent’s Park, London. He is said to have been known as ‘pretty Archbold’ (cf. An Appeal to the People of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from James Wharton, York, 1836). Besides the works already mentioned, he was the author of:

  1. ‘A Digest of the Law relative to Pleading and Evidence in Actions, Real, Personal, and Mixed,’ London, 1821, 12mo; 2nd edit. 1837.
  2. ‘The Law and Practice in Bankruptcy,’ 2nd edit, by John Flather, London, 1827, 12mo; 11th edit, by Flather, 1866.
  3. ‘The Jurisdiction and Practice of the Court of Quarter Sessions,’ London, 1836, 12mo; 3rd edit, by Conway Whithorne Lovesy, 1869; 4th edit, by Frederick Mead and Herbert Stephen Croft, 1886, 8vo; 5th edit, by Sir George Sherston Baker, 1898, 8vo.
  4. ‘The Law of Nisi Prius,’ London, 1843–5, 2 vols. 8vo; vol. i. 2nd edit. 1845, 12mo; 3rd American edition by John K. Findlay, 1853.
  5. ‘The Practice of the Crown Office of the Court of Queen’s Bench,’ London, 1844, 12mo.
  6. ‘The Law of Landlord and Tenant,’ London, 1846,