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 DAN DALRYMPLE, SIR DAVID. An Examination of some of the Arguments for the High Antiquity of Regiam Majestatem ; and an Inquiry into the Authenticity of Leges Malcolmi. 4to. Edin- burgh. 1768. . Catalogue of the Lords of Session, from the Insti- tution of the College of Justice, in the year 1532 ; with historical Notes. 4to. Edinburgh. 17G7. DALTON, M. The Country Justice ; containing the Practice of Justices of the Peace out of their Sessions, and the Duty and Power of Justices of the Peace in their Sessions, fol. I^ondon. 1746. There are some ten or twelve editions of Dalton's Justice, a book pub- lished in the reign of James I., and which, though not a judicial autho- rity, is of considerable weight. 3 Bos. & Pul. 254 ; 1 Brod. & B. 579, 595. . Officium Vicecomitum ; the Office and Authority of Sheriff; to which is added an Appendix, containing the Sta- tutes concerning Sheriffs, made since Dalton's writing. 3d ed. fol. London. 1700. Abridged, 12mo. London. 1628-51. DANA, JAMES G. Reports of Select Cases decided in the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, from 1834 to 1840. 9 vols. 8vo, Frankfort. 1834-40. DANE, NATHAN, Abridgment and Digest of American Law, with Notes and Comments. 9 vols. 8vo. Boston. 1823-29. . Appendix to the Abridgment and Digest of Ame- rican Law, in which are discussed the Powers and Duties of the General and State Governments in relation to each other. 8vo. Boston. 1830. The author treats the rights and remedies of parties in the same con- nection, upon a plan somewhat peculiar. This method imposes the continuous labour of turning to the index to find the object of pursuit. The Abridgment is, in part, based upon the Statutes of Massachusetts and Maine, which gives it, in some degree, the character of a local work, and detracts from its general usefulness. Besides a very careful refer- ence to, and analysis of, the American decisions, the author has inter- woven considerable portions of Comyn's and Cruise's Digest, and Bacon's Abridgment, to support and elucidate his positions, as well as Pothier, and the French Commercial Code. "His comments exhibit 251