Page:Marvin, Legal Bibliography, 1847.djvu/458

This page needs to be proofread.

LAT LANDLORD and TENANT. The Law between Landlord and Tenant. 8vo. London. 1813. LAND-PURCHASER'S COMPANION; and the Laws relating to Tenants and Tenures ; to which are added the Laws and Sta- tutes relating to Tithes, &;c. 12mo. London. 1720. LANE, THO. The Student's Guide through Lincoln's Inn, con- taining a brief Historic Account of the Society, from the earliest foundation ; the present Mode of Application, and Necessary Form of being admitted a Member thereof; with the Regulations lately adopted by the four Law Societies respecting Admissions, the Rules for Keeping Terms, Call to the Bar, &c. 4th ed. 8vo. London. 1823. LANE, RICHARD. Reports in the Court of Exchequer, contain- ing several Cases of Informations upon Intrusion, touching the King's Prerogative, Revenue, and Government ; with divers Inci- dents, Resolutions of Public Concernment in Points of Law. fol. London. 1657. LANGE, A. Brevis Introductio in Notitiam Legum, Nauticarum et Scriptorum Juris reique Maritimae. 2d ed. 4to. Lubecte. 1728. A new edition of this work was issued in 1724. It purports to be a corrected and improved one, but it will be found, upon comparison, to be merely a reprint. Tom. 1 ; Pardessus' Col. de Lois Maritimes, 8. LANGHORNE, RICHARD. Considerations touching the great Question of the King's Right in dispensing with the Penal Laws, fol. London. 1687. LATCH, JEAN. Plusieurs tres-bons Cases, come ils Estoyent Adjudgees en trois Premiers ans du Roign du Roy Charles I., en le Court Bank le Roy, non encore Publices per aucun autre. Publiees par Edward Walpole. fol. London. 1662. Trans- lated into English. By F. X. Martin. 8vo. Newborn. 1793. The Imprimatiire of the Judges states, that " these Reports are all of Mr. Latch's hand ; but, as we conceive, not originally taken by him, but excerpted out of some other manuscript ; but, being a person of great learning in his profession, he would not have taken this pains, if he had not thought them worthy of his transcribing; and, because the Reports of those years, in the King's Bench, are wanting in Mr. Justice Crook's Reports of that Court, (he being in those times a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas,) we think them fit to be printed as a supplement there- 446