Page:Marvin, Legal Bibliography, 1847.djvu/100

 BAI omissions. Imperfections, liowpver, are inevitably incident to the first edition of most books. 4 Jurist, 523 ; 20 L. O. 229. BAGLEY, WILLUM. The Practice at the Chambers of the Judges of the Courts of common law in civil actions. 12mo. London. 1834. " Mr. Bagley's work is as good as a work can be on the subject he has chosen. He has attempted, and with as much success as was pos- sible, to do that which is next to impossible, namely, to separate the practice at Chambers from the practice of the Courts generally." 4 Legal Examiner and Law. Chron. 376; 8 L. O. 485. See Law Library. BAGSHAW, EDW. Two arguments ; I. concerning Canons ; II. Premunire. 4lo. London. 1641. . Rights of the Crown of England, as it is estab- lished by law. 8vo. London. 1660. BAILEY, H. Reports of Cases argued and determined in the Court of Appeal, from the courts of law, (in South Carolina,) from 1828 to 1832. 2 vols. 8vo. Charleston. 1833-4. . Reports of Cases in Equity, argued in the Court of Appeals of South Carolina. 8vo. Charleston. 1841. BAILY, FRANCIS. Tables for the purchasing and renewing of leases for terms of years certain, and for lives, with rules for determining the value of the reversion of estates after such leases, and for the solution of other useful problems. 3d ed. 8vo. London. 1812. BAINBRIDGE, WILLIAM. A Practical Treatise on the law of Mines and Minerals, comprising a detailed account of the respec- tive rights, interests, duties, liabilities, and remedies of land owners, adventurers, agents, and workmen, and of the local cus- toms of Derbyshire, Cornwall and Devon, with an appendix of legal forms, &c. 8vo. London. 1841. The author, a resident of the mining district, has the honor of first producing a regular legal treatise upon the law of mines. The work is ably written, and deserves to be more generally known in this country, where the enterprise of the people has already opened so many sources of mineral wealth. Several other authors have incidentally written upon the subject, whose works will be consulted by those who desire to master all the law upon this branch of jurisprudence. See 3 Davidson's Con- veyancing, 393 ; (4) 137 ; 4 Jarman on Conveyancing, 663 ; Collyer on Partnership, &c. 88