The pandectes of the law of nations contayning seuerall discourses of the questions, points, and matters of law, wherein the nations of the world doe consent and accord. Giuing great light to the vnderstanding and opening of the principall obiects, questions, rules, and cases of the ciuill law, and common lawe of this realme of England. Compiled by William Fulbecke.

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Title
The pandectes of the law of nations contayning seuerall discourses of the questions, points, and matters of law, wherein the nations of the world doe consent and accord. Giuing great light to the vnderstanding and opening of the principall obiects, questions, rules, and cases of the ciuill law, and common lawe of this realme of England. Compiled by William Fulbecke.
Author
Fulbeck, William, 1560-1603?
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London :: Imprinted by [Adam Islip for] Thomas Wight,
1602.
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"The pandectes of the law of nations contayning seuerall discourses of the questions, points, and matters of law, wherein the nations of the world doe consent and accord. Giuing great light to the vnderstanding and opening of the principall obiects, questions, rules, and cases of the ciuill law, and common lawe of this realme of England. Compiled by William Fulbecke." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A01291.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

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The Diuisions and principall contents of the third Dialogue, of Bargaines and Sales.

The first Diuision. 1. WHat things are forbidded to be sold. 2. That by the Ca∣non law things consecrate, & religious, may not be sold 3. That poysons by the ciuil law are forbidden to be sold. 4. That there be some poysons which be medicinable and profitable, and the prohibition extendeth not to these. 5. That some poysons are medicinable alone, some with the mixture of other things. 6. what things are forbidden to be sold by the comon law.

The 2. Diuision. 1. Where a thing was not sold at the first, and where it was sold but the sale was defeasible vpon cōdition. 2. A difference betwixt a perfit sale, and a sale to be perfited vpon a condition performed. 3. That a prouiso though it be placed amongest couenants, may

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defeate a bargaine and sale. 4. That where a bargaine and sale is perfit, but defeasible vpon cōdition, the vendee shal take the pro∣fits till the condition be performed.

The 3. Diuision. 1. When no day is limited for the payment of a summe of mo∣ney, what time the Lawe will require. 2. In such case the partie charged with the payment, shall by the Ciuill Lavve haue three∣score daie. 3. That by the Common lawe when no day is limit∣ted, the money is presently due, yet in some cases by some autho∣ritie the discretion of the Iudges is to limit a time. 4. The defini∣tion of time according to the opinion of Aristotle.

The 4. Diuision. 1. That a bargaine and sale may be auoyded by the defect of some substantiall thing belonging to the act. 2. That fraud and deceit in the contract by the Ciuill law doth defeat the contract. 3. A difference where the default of the thing sold is Latens or Patens. 4. That whether the default be Latens or Patens, if the bar∣gainor doe warrant the thing sold to be without fault, he is bound by the warrantie by the ciuil law. 5. That bargaines and sales, mat∣ters in writing and obligatorie, may be auoyded by alleaging that they were made or done per minas or by duresse. 6. That by the comō law a warrantie made vpon a bargaine and sale doth binde, otherwise it is, if the warrantie be made after the bargaine be con∣cluded. 7. That the warranting of a thing which is euident to the sense, is no cause to bring a Writte of Disceit by the Common law.

The 5. Diuision. 1. That by the comon law the bargaine and sale, or the grant of the profits of land, is the grant of the land it selfe. 2. That by the Ciuill law a man may grant and demise the vse of a thing, and yet not grant the thing it selfe.

The 6. Diuision. 1. When a man selleth land wherein treasure is hidded, and the vendor knoweth not of it, whether the vendee shall haue the

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treasure. 2. How this word (treasure) is taken in the Ciuill law. 3. That by the Ciuill law, money and other things necessarie to the common vse of this life are forbidden to be hidden & buried in the ground. 4. Plato his superstitious opinion of things hidden in the earth. 5. How the Ciuill law doth order & dispose of treasure. 6. What the Common law doth determin of treasure.

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