Page:Marvin, Legal Bibliography, 1847.djvu/689

 SUG STURGEON, C. The Insolvent Debtors' Act?, 1 & 2 Vict. c. 110, and 5 &; 6 Vict. c. UG ; with Practical Notes appended to each Section, as a Guide to the Law and Practice of Insolvency. 12mo. London. 1842. . The Practice before the Commissioners' Court of Subdivision, and Court of Review ; with Orders, Costs, and Forms ; being a Supplement to the Bankrupt Acts. r2mo. Lon- don. 1835. . The Bankrupt Act, G Geo. IV. c. IG, and the Bankrupt Court Act, 1 &l 2 Will. IV. c. 5G ; with Notes on all the recent Decisions at Common Law and in Equity, and Abstracts from other Statutes relating to Bankruptcy. 12mo. London. 1831. STYLE, WM. A Practical Register, begun in the Reign of Ch. I., consisting of Rules, Orders, and the Principal Observations concerning the Practice of the Common Law in the Courts of Westminster, particularly the King's Bench, as well in matters Criminal as Civil. 4th ed. 8vo. London. 1707. The former editions are more commonly referred to by Corny ns, as Re- gula placttandi. Lilly published a continuation of Style's Register, in 2 vols. 8vo. 1710. Both these arc incorporated in Lilly's practical Re- gister. Clarke. . Narrutiones Modernse ; or Modern Reports, be- gun in the now U. B. from H. T. 21 Car. to M. T. 1665, as well on the Criminal, as on the Pleas Side, most of which time Lord Roll gave the Rule there, fol. London. 1658. Style's Reports are singularly valuable from the circumstance of being the only cases extant of the common law courts for several years, in the time of the usurpation, during which Sir Henry Roll, and afterwards John Glynn, sat as Chief Justice of the upper bench. Clarke. SUGDEN, SIR EDWARD B. A Practical Treatise on Powers. 7th ed. 8vo. London. 1845. 1st Am. edition, with Notes and References to American Decisions, by E. D. Ingraham. Bvo. Philadelphia. 1823. See Laiu Library. The authority of this work is second to no modern elementary law book. The author "explores the fountain head of his suhject, and in these laborious and useful scrutinies, he has in many instances succeeded in verifying original reports." The just results of the cases appear to 677