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 Latest Important Cases

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Butterworth & Co., London. Pp. x, 550 + appen dix and index 45. "The Fixed Law of Patents, as Established by the Supreme Court of the United States and the Nine Circuit Courts of Appeals." By William Macomber. Little, Brown & Co., Boston. Pp. cxxxix, 907 + index 17. ($7.50 net.) "Grounds and Rudiments of Law." By William T. Hughes. 4v. Usona Book Co., Chicago, v. 1, pp. xv, 283 + appendix 71; v. 2, pp. x, Text-Index NEW BOOKS RECEIVED 228; v. 3, "Datum Posts of Jurisprudence," pp. 218 + index 32; v. 4, pp. 12, Text-Index 275. RECEIPT of the following new books, x, (Sheep $16, buckram $15.) which will be reviewed later, is acknowl "International Incidents for Discussion in Con edged:— versation Classes." By L. Oppenheim, LL.D., Professor of International Law in the "Mr. Justice Raffles." By E. W. Horaung. Whewell University of Cambridge. Cambridge University Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. ($I.50.) Press; G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York. Pp. xi, "Select Essays in Anglo-American Legal His 129. Alternate pages left blank for notes. ($1.) tory." By Various Authors. V. 3. Little, Brown "A History of English Law." By W. S. Holds& Co., Boston. ($12 net for the set of three vol worth, M.A., B.C.L., Vice-President and Fellow umes.) of St. John's College, Oxford. Little, Brown & Co., "Equity; also, The Forms of Action at Common Boston. V. 1, xl, 421, appendix and index 38; Law." By the late Professor F. W. Maitland. v. 2, xxvii, 507, appendix and index 64; v. 3, pp. Cambridge University Press; G. P. Putnam's xxxiv, 495, appendix and index 34. ($4 per vol Sons, New York. Pp. 407 (index). ($4.) ume.) "Practical Suggestions for Drawing Wills and "Selected Statutes of the State of New York." the Settlement of Estates in Pennsylvania." By As amended to close of legislative session of 1909, John Marshall Gest of the Philadelphia bar. comprising the following consolidated laws: De T. & J. W. Johnson Co., Philadelphia. Pp. xx, 141 cedent Estate Law, Domestic Relations Law, Lien + index 10. ($2 net.) Law, Negotiable Instruments Law, Personal Prop "Foreign Judgments and Jurisdiction." Part erty Law, Real Property Law. 6th ed. Matthew II, "Judgments in Rem — Status." 3d ed. By Bender & Company, Albany, N. Y. Pp. v, 457. Sir Francis Piggott, Chief Justice of Hongkong. ($2 net.) fession. Chief among them is the address of Presi dent Taft on "The Administration of Justice: Its Speeding and Cheapening." Other papers are those of Hon. William Lindsay, on "The Man and the Corporation," and the president s address delivered by Hon. Wyndham R. Meredith on "Federal Control of Intra-State Commerce."

Latest Important Cases* Appeals. Admissibility of Evidence as to Fraudulent Intent— Verdict will not Be Set Aside for Inconsistencies Which are not Sub stantial. The United States Circuit Court of Appeals, seventh circuit, reviewing a writ of error in the case of Walsh v. U. S., decided Oct. 5 (Chicago Legal News, Oct. 9, 1909), affirmed the judgment of the trial court, dealing with several questions brought up in the volumi nous record of the case. On the question of admissibility of evidence as to fraudulent •Many of these decisions are not yet reported, and no citations can be given. Copies of the pamphlet Reporters containing full reports of such of them as are cited in the National Reporter System may be secured from the West Publishing Company, St. Paul, Minnesota, at 25 cents each. In order ing, the title of the desired case should be given as well as the citation of volume and page of the Reporter in which it is printed.

intent, the Court (Humphrey, District Judge) said :— "It is urged on behalf of plaintiff in error that the verdict is not sustained by the evi dence because the record as a whole does not show any guilty intent, and also that the trial court erred in permitting the jury to consider evidence of other acts of the defendant of a kindred nature, not counted upon in the indictment. "Where fraudulent intent is an essential element of the offense charged, evidence of other acts of defendant of a kindred nature is competent to illustrate the character^of the transaction in question, and throw light on the intent with which this particular act was done. We see no error in admitting evi dence of similar transactions to prove intent." The Court also held:—