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 CAR that he is in general a very good and a very faithful reporter, but I fancy he was mistaken in the case of Leigh v. Brace." But Lord Thurlow said Carthew and Comberbach were equally bad authority, which opinion, as to the former, is in substance reiterated by Wooddeson in his lectures. The fact of the Reports having passed to a second edition at a period when every new book was most closely scrutinized, would seem to show that the volume was in considerable favor with the profession general!}'. 2 T. R. 776 ; Willes, 182 ; 1 Bro. Ch. Ca. 97 ; 1 Wood. Lee. 495 ; (3) 99, n. CARUTHERS, R. L. and A. O. P. NICHOLSON. A Compi- lation of the Statutes of Tennessee, of a general and permanent nature, from the commencement of the Government to the present time. With Reference to Judicial Decisions in the Notes, to which is appended a new collection of Forms. 8vo. Nashville. 1836. '' This work is an improvement on the plan of Haywood and Cobbs. It is compiled with care and ability. The statutes and sections still in force are placed under appropriate heads — arranged in the order of time of their enactments, with reference, in notes, to judicial decisions, giving, a construction to statutes." GARY, HENRY. Fruit of Pleading in Sir Edw. Coke's Reports. Svo. London. 1601. . Commentaries. See Littleton's Tenures. . Practical Treatise on the Law of Juries and Jurors, as founded on the Act 6 Geo, IV. 12mo. London. 1826. ■ . Treatise on the Law of Partnership, with Prece- dents of Copartnership Deeds. Svo. London. 1827. See Law Library. " Gary on Partnership, has nothing in particular to recommend it, ex- cept it be the addition of new Cases, arising since the publication of Mr. Gow. 3 Kent's Com. 69. . On the Statute 9 Geo. IV. c. 31, relating to Of- fences against the Person, with Forms of Indictment, &;c., and the Evidence necessary to support tliem ; also, the Statute 9 Geo. IV. c. 32, for amending the Law of Evidence. 12mo. London. 1828. GARY, SIR GEORGE. Reports of Cases in Chancery, whereunto is annexed the King's Order and Decree in Chancery, for a rule to be observed in that Court. 12mo. London. 1650, 1655, 1820. The paging is not alike in the different editions of these Reports. 12 177