Narrationes modernæ, or, Modern reports begun in the now upper bench court at VVestminster in the beginning of Hillary term 21 Caroli, and continued to the end of Michaelmas term 1655 as well on the criminall, as on the pleas side : most of which time the late Lord Chief Justice Roll gave the rule there : with necessary tables for the ready finding out and making use of the matters contained in the whole book : and an addition of the number rolls to most of the remarkable cases / by William Style ...

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Title
Narrationes modernæ, or, Modern reports begun in the now upper bench court at VVestminster in the beginning of Hillary term 21 Caroli, and continued to the end of Michaelmas term 1655 as well on the criminall, as on the pleas side : most of which time the late Lord Chief Justice Roll gave the rule there : with necessary tables for the ready finding out and making use of the matters contained in the whole book : and an addition of the number rolls to most of the remarkable cases / by William Style ...
Author
England and Wales. Court of King's Bench.
Publication
London :: Printed by F.L. for W. Lee, D. Pakeman, G. Bedel, and C. Adams,
1658.
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Subject terms
Law reports, digests, etc. -- England.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61918.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Narrationes modernæ, or, Modern reports begun in the now upper bench court at VVestminster in the beginning of Hillary term 21 Caroli, and continued to the end of Michaelmas term 1655 as well on the criminall, as on the pleas side : most of which time the late Lord Chief Justice Roll gave the rule there : with necessary tables for the ready finding out and making use of the matters contained in the whole book : and an addition of the number rolls to most of the remarkable cases / by William Style ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61918.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 10, 2024.

Pages

Pasch. 1652. Banc. sup.

AN action of debt was brought against one for 50 l. due for divers pie∣ces of lixnen cloath sold to the Defendant.* 1.1 The Defendant was rea∣dy at the Bar to wage his Law; but the Court being enformed that the Defendants wife kept a shop, and used to buy and sell by her husbands privity and allowance, and that these parcells of cloath were bought by her to furnish her shop, and that the Defendant her husband, although he was a Sea man, and medled not in buying and selling of any of the wares in the Shop, yet his wife did it by his allowance; Roll chief Iustice advised the Defendant to take heed he waged not his Law, for that he could not do it with a good conscience, because his allowance of his wifes buying the wares was all one, as if he had bought them himself, and counselled him to plead, to which the Defendant consented, and the ley gager was waived by consent of the partyes, and an emparlance given till the next Term.* 1.2

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