Page:Legal Bibliography, Numbers 1 to 12, 1881 to 1890.djvu/66

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6 SOULE'S LEGAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. A NEW BOOK OP GREAT PRACTICAL VALUE. CONTENTS. VIII. Hfcns, JtSovtflages anti Srust Art. 185. — General Principles. PAGE 1S50. Defiiiilions 250 1851. Louisiana Civil Law 250 1862. Nature 260 1853. What May be Mortgaged .... 260 1851. Wliat May Not be 260 1855. Extent of the Lien 260 1856. Creation 260 1857. Form 261 18-38. Execution 261 1859. Unrecordeil Mortg.Tges 261 1860. The Defeasance 261 1861. Affidavit 262 1802. Priority of Mortgage Liens ... 262 186.3. The Condition 262 1804. To Secure Purcliase-Money ... 262 1865. Mortgage Debt 262 1860. Subsequent Conditions 263 1867. Covefiants in Mortgages .... 263 1868. Duration 263 1869. Assignment 263 1870. Form of 263 1871. Effect 263 1872. Assignment of the Estate .... 264 1873. Anticliresis 264 Art. 188. — Of the Parties. 1880. Of the Mortgagor 264 1881. The Mortgagee 264 1882. Right of Possession 264 1883. Entry before Breach 266 1881. Waste 265 1885. Tacking 266 Art. 189. — Trust Deeds and Special Cases. 1890. Special Cases of Mortgage .... 265 1891. Conditional Sales 265 1892. Trust Deeds 265 1893. Removal of Trustee 266 266 4. Sale by Trustee Art. 190. — Performance and Discharge . 1900. Effort of Performance 266 1901. Discharge by the Mortgagee ... 266 1902. Penalty 267 1903. Release of Part 267 1904. Payment by Instalments .... 267 190-5. Mode of Release 267 1906. Forms of 268 1907. Mortgagee Deceased 268 1908. Erasure of Mortgages 269 Art. 192. — Foreclosure. 1920. Methods 1021. By Entry 1922. By Advertisement 1923. By Mortgagees in Possessioi 1924. Power of Sale . . . PAGE 1925. By Action 272 1926. The Proceeds 274 1927. Effect 274 1928. Time of Foreclosure 275 1929. For Instahiients Due 275 1930. Foreclosure by Bill 275 1931. Pending Foreclosure 276 1932. Concurrent Remedies 276 1933. Foreclosure by Assignee .... 276 1934. Record of Foreclosure 277 1935. Foreclosure against Assignees . . 277 1936. Parties 277 Art. 194. — Redemption. 1940. Opening Foreclosure 1941. Redemption Pending Foreclosure . 1942. Redemption after Condition Broken, but before Foreclosure 1943. Redemption after Foreclosure . . 1944. General Principles 1945. Redemption by Creditors . . . . 1946. Final Decree , . . 1947. Mortgagee in Possession . . . . 1948. Fraud 277 278 278 278 279 279 279 279 279 Art, 195. — Other Liens. 1950. Vendor's Liens 280 1951. Nature of the Lien 280 1952. Purchaser's Lien 280 1953. Effect 280 1954. Lien on Crops 280 1955. Liens for Improvements .... 281 1956. Louisiana Civil Law 281 Art. 196. — Mechanics' Liens. 1960. The Lien 1961. Person Entitled 1962. Nature of Improvement 1963. Conditions 1964 Contract 1965. Notice to the Owner 1966. Sub-Contractors 1967. Notice 1968. Record 1969. Effect 1970. Rights and Duties of Owner . . . 1971. Amount of the Lien 1972. Rights and Duties of Head Con- tractor 1973. Subject Property 1974. Estate of Owner 1975. Preventing Lien 1976. Limitation for Suit 1977. When Work must be performed 1978. Assignment of Liens 1979. Special Liens 1980. Co-existing Liens 1981. Removal of Liens 1982. Precedence 198.3. Removal of Fixtures by Mechanic . 1984. Materials not Liable to Execution . 1985. Other Suits 1986. Insurance 1987. Rights of Sub-Contractors . . . . 282 282 283 284 287 288 288 290 291 291 292 292 292 292 293 294 294 294 295 296 Specimen Page of Table of Contents. AMERICAN STATUTE LAW: An Analysis and Compared Digest of the Constitutions and Civil Public Statutes of all the States and Terri-, tories, relating to Persons and Proper- ty, in Force Jan. 1, 1886. By FREDERIC J. STIMSON, Author of Stimson's Law Glossary. One large royal octavo volniitc, bound /« law sheep. Price, $6.50 net. This is, in many respects, the most novel and important law book published in this generation. It is a compact but lucid comparative statement of the law of all the States and Territories on each topic covered by their statutes, and of interest in other States It would seem singular that so val- uable a digest has never been attempted before ; were it not known to all lawyers that the Revised Statutes of the forty-seven States and organized Territories, together with their subsequent session- laws, occupy about two hundred and fifty bulky vol- umes, containing a mass of printed matter before which the most patient investigator might quail. Mr. Stimson has devoted five years to the task of reading, comparing, and condensing these statutes ; and, in addition to this original work, has twice verified every statement and citation. Those who have used Mr. Stimson's Law Glossary, and know his singular ability in apt and compact state- ment of law, will be prepared to find in this new work similar characteristics, without which it could not prove a success. This volume covers all the Constitutions and the law relating to Persons and Property (including Successions), in short, all ordinary substantive law, and is complete in itself. Another volume, to contain Corporation Law, Insolvency, and Proced- ure, will be published in 1887. Two quahfications as to the usefulness of this work might suggest themselves to a lawyer, — the apparent impossibility of compressing into one or two volumes the contents of two hundred and fifty, and the danger that the State law might be changed by subsequent legislation. As to the first doubt, even a slight examination will show that the bulk of our laws are identical in the various States, and that there have been two or three main streams of legislation, so to speak, aris- ing in New York, New England, and the Southern Atlantic States, so that one statement of law often serves for all, or nearly all, the States. Again, American Statute Law. — "The statute law of the United States forms a vast body of jurisprudence, in many cases complicated, peculiar, and novel, but eminently adapted to our unprecedented situation, and of equal interest for the citizen and the X^^^j^x^ — Sedgwick on Statutory and Constitutionnl Law.