Product Type
Condition
Binding
Collectible Attributes
Seller Location
Seller Rating
Published by verschiedene Verlage
Seller: Versandantiquariat Kerzemichel, Wittenberge, Germany
4 x Tb, alle Exemplare 8°, 1 x als Mängelexemplar gelennzeichnet, gut.
Published by J, 1897
Seller: Cambridge Rare Books, Cambridge, GLOUC, United Kingdom
HARDCOVER. Condition: GOOD. 1897-01-01. J.W. Arrowsmith. Hardcover. ACCEPTABLE No DJ. Edgewear. Rubbed. Spine faded. Previous owners name.
Published by reprinted by John Bellows, Gloucester, UK, 1897
Seller: Ray Boas, Bookseller - Established 1980, Walpole, NH, U.S.A.
PB. 15pp "A Fisherman Who Was Pressed at Scarborough During the War Between the English and Dutch in 1665." Richard Sellar was one of the early members of the Society of Friends. very good, wraps (softcover) in early Gaylord pamphlet binder.
Published by J.W. Arrowsmith, 1897
Seller: Cotswold Internet Books, Cheltenham, United Kingdom
First Edition
Condition: Used - Good. Good Hardback. 1st ed. Presentation copy from August Roeckel, with gift inscription from him on half title. Firm copy in tight binding; cream cloth with gilt titles; cloth stained on spine & board edges, with even wear-marks on both boards. Pages neat; yellowing on rough cut edges.
Published by Duncker & Humblot Okt 2009, 2009
ISBN 10: 342813124XISBN 13: 9783428131242
Seller: BuchWeltWeit Ludwig Meier e.K., Bergisch Gladbach, Germany
Book
Taschenbuch. Condition: Neu. Neuware -The law of presumptions has never been popular among commentators. It has attracted few scholars, and most of the few who have ventured into the subject have come away as critics rather than admirers. Certainly, there are plausible reasons for this bad reputation. Presumptions are evidently inferior to more direct forms of proof; indeed they may not be forms of proof at all. They raise difficulties of definition and classification. Some presumptions also seem quite artificial, hard to defend as reliable indicators of the truth.Despite their poor reputation, they have long been accepted and applied in practice. Legal presumptions play a part in virtually all Western legal systems. It is hard to image a workable law of proof without them, and their acceptance has been a fact of life for many centuries. Even in England, where the use of juries in the common law might seem to have excluded any need for legal presumptions, they took hold from an early date. They thus seem to be a natural candidate for comparative historical treatment. The essays in this volume seek to address this gap in scholarship.The essays do not set out directly to rehabilitate the law of presumptions. They seek rather to explore the process by which presumptions worked their way into Western law and to examine the links that have existed between legal systems. The essays embrace not only English common law and Continental systems, but also 'mixed systems' like the law of Scotland and of Southern Africa. By examining the subject from an historical point of view, they seek to help explain the acceptance and persistence of a law of presumptions in Western law. 253 pp. Englisch.
Published by Duncker & Humblot Okt 2009, 2009
ISBN 10: 342813124XISBN 13: 9783428131242
Seller: Rheinberg-Buch Andreas Meier eK, Bergisch Gladbach, Germany
Book
Taschenbuch. Condition: Neu. Neuware -The law of presumptions has never been popular among commentators. It has attracted few scholars, and most of the few who have ventured into the subject have come away as critics rather than admirers. Certainly, there are plausible reasons for this bad reputation. Presumptions are evidently inferior to more direct forms of proof; indeed they may not be forms of proof at all. They raise difficulties of definition and classification. Some presumptions also seem quite artificial, hard to defend as reliable indicators of the truth.Despite their poor reputation, they have long been accepted and applied in practice. Legal presumptions play a part in virtually all Western legal systems. It is hard to image a workable law of proof without them, and their acceptance has been a fact of life for many centuries. Even in England, where the use of juries in the common law might seem to have excluded any need for legal presumptions, they took hold from an early date. They thus seem to be a natural candidate for comparative historical treatment. The essays in this volume seek to address this gap in scholarship.The essays do not set out directly to rehabilitate the law of presumptions. They seek rather to explore the process by which presumptions worked their way into Western law and to examine the links that have existed between legal systems. The essays embrace not only English common law and Continental systems, but also 'mixed systems' like the law of Scotland and of Southern Africa. By examining the subject from an historical point of view, they seek to help explain the acceptance and persistence of a law of presumptions in Western law. 253 pp. Englisch.
Published by Duncker & Humblot, 2009
ISBN 10: 342813124XISBN 13: 9783428131242
Seller: Revaluation Books, Exeter, United Kingdom
Book
Paperback. Condition: Brand New. 253 pages. 9.13x6.14 inches. In Stock.
Published by Duncker & Humblot Okt 2009, 2009
ISBN 10: 342813124XISBN 13: 9783428131242
Seller: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germany
Book
Taschenbuch. Condition: Neu. Neuware - The law of presumptions has never been popular among commentators. It has attracted few scholars, and most of the few who have ventured into the subject have come away as critics rather than admirers. Certainly, there are plausible reasons for this bad reputation. Presumptions are evidently inferior to more direct forms of proof; indeed they may not be forms of proof at all. They raise difficulties of definition and classification. Some presumptions also seem quite artificial, hard to defend as reliable indicators of the truth.Despite their poor reputation, they have long been accepted and applied in practice. Legal presumptions play a part in virtually all Western legal systems. It is hard to image a workable law of proof without them, and their acceptance has been a fact of life for many centuries. Even in England, where the use of juries in the common law might seem to have excluded any need for legal presumptions, they took hold from an early date. They thus seem to be a natural candidate for comparative historical treatment. The essays in this volume seek to address this gap in scholarship.The essays do not set out directly to rehabilitate the law of presumptions. They seek rather to explore the process by which presumptions worked their way into Western law and to examine the links that have existed between legal systems. The essays embrace not only English common law and Continental systems, but also 'mixed systems' like the law of Scotland and of Southern Africa. By examining the subject from an historical point of view, they seek to help explain the acceptance and persistence of a law of presumptions in Western law.