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A treatise upon the laws of England now in force for the recovery of debt, pointing out the many abuses of them
Together with a plan for administering more speedy and equitable justice to creditors and to debtors. By John Prujean, Esq. of Gray's-Inn; and dedicated, with permission, to His Grace the Duke of Norfolk -
Pet. York-Buildings Company, against an Inner-house interlocutor; in the process, against Alexander Mackenzie, W.S. agent. G. Clk. Unto the Right Honourable the Lords of Council and Session, the petition of the governor and company of undertakers for raising the Thames water in York-buildings
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State, John Newlands, against Thomas Mercer, &c
State of the process of reduction-improbation declarator, Lieutenant John Newlands of Lochhead, against Thomas Mercer, writer in Edinburgh, John Wood, Esq; lately residing at King's-Cramond now in Edinburgh, Thomas Sivewright of South-house and Alexander Lord Macdonald -
The trial of George Rose
Esq. Secretary to the Treasury, &c. for employing Mr. Smith, a publican in Westminster, upon a late Westminster election, and not paying him; ... Taken in short hand, by a barrister -
Commonwealth of Massachusetts. In the year of our Lord, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-one
An act to suspend in certain cases, the operation of an act, passed on the thirteenth day of February, Anno Domini, one thousand seven hundred and eighty-seven, intitled, "An act for the limitation of personal actions, and for avoiding suits at law." -
Remarks on the practice and effect of imprisonment for debt, and clauses proposed to be inserted in a bill for the security of creditors and the amendment of the law, touching the imprisonment of debtors who are insolvent, without their wilful default
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A treatise on civil imprisonment in England; with the history of its progress, and objections to its policy, as it respects the interests of creditors, and the punishment, or protection of debtors. Concluding with the Principles and General Lines of a Plan for Amending the Present Law; and an Appendix of Notes. By Thomas Macdonald, Esquire, of the Inner Temple, Barrister at Law