The nominate reports, also known as nominative reports,[1][2] named reports and private reports,[3] are the various published collections of law reports of cases in English courts from the Middle Ages to the 1860s.
Most (but not all) are reprinted in the English Reports.[4] They are described as "nominate" (named) in order to distinguish them from the Year Books, which are anonymous.[5]
An example of a nominate report is Edmund F. Moore's Reports of Cases Heard and Determined by the Judicial Committee and the Lords of His Majesty's most Honourable Privy Council on Appeal from the Supreme and Sudder Dewanny Courts in the East Indies, published in London from 1837 to 1873, referred to as Moore's Indian Appeals and cited for example as: Moofti Mohummud Ubdoollah v. Baboo Mootechund 1 M.I.A. 383.
In the 1860s, law reporting in England was taken over by the Incorporated Council of Law Reporting, ending the practice of nominate reports.
List
- Acton
- Addams[6]
- Adolphus and Ellis[7]
- Aleyn
- Ambler
- Anderson
- Andrews
- Anstruther
- Atkyns
- Barnardiston's Chancery Reports
- Barnardiston's King's Bench Reports
- Barnes
- Barnewall and Adolphus[8]
- Barnewall and Alderson[9]
- Barnewall and Cresswell[10]
- Beavan[11]
- Bell
- Bellewe
- Benloe
- Benloe and Dalison
- Best and Smith
- Bingham
- Bingham, New Cases
- Blackstone, Henry
- Blackstone, William
- Bligh[12]
- Bligh, New Series
- Bosanquet and Puller[13]
- Bosanquet and Puller, New Reports
- Bridgman, Sir J.
- Bridgeman, Sir O.
- Broderip and Bingham[14]
- Brook's New Cases
- Browning and Lushington[15]
- Brown's Chancery Cases (Belt)
- Brown's Parliament Cases
- Brownlow and Goldsborough[16]
- Bulstrode[17]
- Bunberry[18]
- Burrell[19]
- Burrow[20]
- Calthorpe
- Campbell
- Carrington and Kirwan
- Carrington and Marsham
- Carrington and Payne
- Carter
- Carthew
- Cary
- Cases in Chancery
- Choyce Cases in Chancery
- Clark and Finelly
- Coke's Reports
- Colles
- Collyer
- Comberbach[21]
- The Common Bench Reports
- The Common Bench Reports, New Series
- Comyns
- Cooke
- Cooper's Practice Cases
- Cooper, G
- Cooper, temp Brougham
- Cooper, temp Cottenham
- Cowper[22]
- Cox
- Craig and Phillips
- Croke, Eliz.
- Croke, Jac.
- Croke, Car.
- Crompton and Jervis
- Crompton and Meeson
- Crompton, Meeson and Roscoe
- Cunningham
- Curteis
- Daniell
- Davis, Ireland
- Deane and Swabey
- Dearsly
- Dearsly and Bell
- De Gex, Fisher and Jones
- De Gex, Jones and Smith
- De Gex, M'Naghten and Gorden
- De Gex and Smale[23]
- Denison
- Dickens
- Dodson
- Donnelly
- Douglas[24]
- Dow
- Dow and Clark
- Dowling and Ryland
- Drewry
- Drewry and Smale
- Dyer[25]
- East
- Eden
- Edwards
- Ellis and Blackburn[26]
- Ellis and Blackburn and Ellis[27]
- Ellis and Ellis[28]
- Equity Cases Abridged
- Espinasse's Reports
- The Exchequer Reports (Welsby, Hurlstone and Gordon)
- Fitzgibbon
- Forrest
- Fortescue
- Foster's Crown Cases
- Foster and Finlason
- Freeman's Chancery Reports
- Freeman's King's Bench Reports
- Giffard[29]
- Gibert's Cases in Law and Equity
- Gilbert
- Godbolt[30]
- Gouldsborough
- Gow
- Haggard's Admiralty Reports
- Haggard's Consistory Reports
- Haggard's Ecclesiastical Reports
- Hall and Twells
- Hardes
- Hardwicke, cases temp
- Hare
- Hay and Marriott
- Hemming and Miller[31]
- Hetley
- Hobart
- Holt, Nisi Prius
- Holt, Equity
- Holt, King's Bench
- House of Lords Cases (Clark)
- Hurlstone and Coltman
- Hurlstone and Newman
- Hutton[32]
- Jacob
- Jacob and Walker
- Jenkins (Eight centuries of cases)
- Johnson
- Johnson and Hemming[33]
- Jones, T
- Jones, W
- Kay
- Kay and Johnson
- Keble
- Keen
- Keilway
- Kelyng
- Kenyon
- Knapp
- Lane
- Latch
- Leach
- Lee
- Leigh and Cave
- Leonard
- Levinz
- Lewin's Crown Cases on the Northern Circuit[34]
- Ley
- Lilly-Assize
- Littleton
- Lofft
- Lushington
- Lutwyche
- Maclaen and Robinson
- M'Cleland
- M'Cleland and Younge
- M'Naghten and Gordon
- Maddock
- Manning and Granger
- March, New Cases
- Maule and Selwyn
- Meeson and Welsby
- Merivale
- The Modern Reports
- Moody's Crown Cases Reserved
- Moody and Malkin
- Moody and Robinson
- Moore, King's Bench
- Moore, Privy Council
- Moore, Privy Council, New Series
- Moore's Indian Appeals
- Mosely
- Mylne and Craig
- Mylne and Keen
- Nelson
- Noy
- Owen
- Palmer
- Parker
- Peake
- Peake, Additional Cases
- Peere Williams
- Philimore
- Phillips
- Plowden's Commentaries
- Pollexfen
- Popham
- Port[35]
- Precedents in Chancery (T Finch)
- Price
- The Queen's Bench Reports
- Lord Raymond's Reports
- Raymond, Sir T
- Reports in Chancery
- Reports, temp Finch
- Ridgeway, temp Hardwicke
- Robertson
- Robinson, C
- Robinson, W
- Rolle
- Russell
- Russell and Mylne
- Russell and Ryan
- Ryan and Moody
- Salkfield
- Saunders (edition by Peere Williams is called William's Saunders)[36]
- Saville
- Sayer
- Searle and Smith[37]
- Select Cases, temp King
- Session Cases
- Shower, House of Lords
- Shower, King's Bench
- Siderfin
- Simons
- Simons, New Series
- Simons and Stuart
- Skinner
- Smale and Giffard[38]
- Spelman[39]
- Spinks
- Spinks' Prize Cases
- Starkie
- The State Trials (Cobbett and Howell)
- The State Trials, New Series (Macdonell)
- Strange
- Style
- Swabey
- Swabey and Tristram
- Swanston
- Talbot, cases temp
- Tamyln
- Taunton
- The Term Reports (Durnford and East)
- Tothill
- Turner and Russell
- Vaughan
- Ventris
- Vernon
- Vesey Senior
- Vesey Senior, supplement by Belt
- Vesey Junior
- Vesey Junior, supplement by Hovenden
- Vesey and Beams
- West
- West, temp Hardwicke
- Wightwick
- Willes
- Wilmot
- Wilson
- Wilson, Chancery
- Wilson, King's Bench
- Winch[40]
- Yelverton
- Younge
- Younge and Collyer
- Younge and Collyer C C
- Younge and Jervis
See also
References
- Wallace, John William. The Reporters. Third Edition Revised. T & J W Johnson. Philadelphia. 1855. Digitised copy from Google Books.
- J. W. Wallace, The Reporters, 4th ed., 1882
- John Charles Fox, Handbook of English Law Reports, 1913, Internet Archive
- William Thomas Shave Daniel, History and Origin of the Law Reports (London, 1884)
- Clarence Gabriel Moran. The Heralds of the Law. London. 1948.
- Van Vechten Veeder, "The English Reports, 1292-1865" (1901) 15 Harvard Law Review 1 and 109; reprinted at 2 Select Essays in Anglo American Legal History 123
- L W Abbott. Law Reporting in England 1485-1585. (University of London Legal Series No 10). The Athlone Press. London. 1973.
- William Searle Holdsworth. "Law Reporting in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries". Anglo-American Legal History Series, No. 5 (1941). Reprinted in Goodhart and Hanbury (eds) Essays in Law and History, by Sir William S Holdsworth, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1946, reprinted by The Lawbook Exchange Limited (Union, New Jersey) 1995. Page 284 et seq.
- Chantal Stebbings (ed). Law Reporting in Britain: Proceedings of the Eleventh British Legal History Conference. 1995. Hambledon Press. ISBN 1852851295. Google Books. Chapters 5 and 7 to 9.
Notes
- ↑ English Legal History. Duke University.
- ↑ See also Case citation#Supreme Court of the United States
- ↑ O Hood Phillips and A H Hudson. A First Book of English Law. Seventh Edition. Sweet & Maxwell. London. 1977. ISBN 978-0-421-23030-9. Page 172.
- ↑ Glanville Williams, Learning the Law, 11th Edition, 1982, Stevens, p.34; 13th Edition, 2006, Sweet and Maxwell, p.36 (less clear)
- ↑ Blunt, Adrian. In R G Logan (editor). Information Sources in Law. Butterworths. London. 1986. p 49.
- ↑ By Jesse Addams. See "Obituary" (1871) 15 Solicitors Journal 564 (3 June); "Legal Obituary" (1871) 51 The Law Times 185 (8 July); Boase, "Addams, Jesse", Modern English Biography, 1892, vol 1 (A-H), p 21; Alumni Oxonienis; WorldCat.
- ↑ By John Leycester Adolphus and Thomas Flower Ellis: Google Books.
- ↑ By John Leycester Adolphus and Richard Vaughan Barnewall.
- ↑ By Richard Vaughan Barnewall and Edward Hall Alderson.
- ↑ By Richard Vaughan Barnewall and Sir Cresswell Cresswell.
- ↑ By Charles Beavan
- ↑ By Richard Bligh
- ↑ By John Bernard Bosanquet and Christopher Puller
- ↑ By William John Broderip and Peregrine Bingham
- ↑ By William Ernst-Browning and Vernon Lushington. See Trove.
- ↑ By Richard Brownlow and John Goldesborough (aka Goldesburg aka Gouldsborough).
- ↑ By Edward Bulstrode
- ↑ By William Bunbury and published by George Wilson: Google Books
- ↑ By Sir William Burrell, 2nd Baronet and edited by Reginald Godfrey Marsden: Google Books. As to Marsden, see Men at the Bar.
- ↑ By Sir James Burrow
- ↑ By Roger Comberbach, Recorder of Chester: Google Books.
- ↑ By Henry Cowper
- ↑ By John Peter De Gex and John Jackson Smale
- ↑ By Sylvester Douglas, 1st Baron Glenbervie
- ↑ By Sir James Dyer
- ↑ By Thomas Flower Ellis and Colin Blackburn, Baron Blackburn: Trove.
- ↑ By Thomas Flower Ellis and Colin Blackburn and Francis Ellis: Trove. As to Francis Ellis, see "McTaggart (formerly Ellis), Francis" in Alumni Cantabrigienses, vol 3 (Kaile-Ryves), p 286.
- ↑ By Thomas Flower Ellis and Francis Ellis: Google Books
- ↑ By John Walter de Longueville Giffard. As to J. W. de L. Giffard, see Men at the Bar 176 and WorldCat.
- ↑ By John Godbolt.
- ↑ By George Wirgman Hemming and Alexander Edward Miller
- ↑ By Sir Richard Hutton: Wallace's Reporters, Dictionary of National Biography.
- ↑ By George Wirgman Hemming and Henry Robert Vaughan Johnson. As to Johnson, see Men at the Bar (1885) 245.
- ↑ By Sir Gregory Allnutt Lewin. See eg "Lewin, Gregory Allnutt". A Naval Biographical Dictionary. 1849. , Whishaw's Synopsis, Gentleman's Magazine, Dod's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage.
- ↑ John Hamilton Baker. An Introduction to English Legal History. Third Edition. Butterworth. 1990. Pages 207 to 209. These reports are by Sir John Port.
- ↑ By Edmund Saunders
- ↑ Julius J Marke (ed), A Catalogue of the Law Collection at New York University with Selected Annotations, Law Center of New York University, 1953, Library of Congress Catalog card 58-6489, Reprinted by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd (Union, New Jersey) 1999, p 30
- ↑ By John Jackson Smale and John Walter de Longueville Giffard
- ↑ John Hamilton Baker. An Introduction to English Legal History. Third Edition. Butterworth. 1990. Pages 207 to 209.
- ↑ Named after Sir Humphrey Winch, but includes, in particular, reports of judicial decisions made after his death that cannot possibly have been reported by him. Some of the decisions might have been reported by Richard Allestree, who died in 1655. (Baker, An Introduction to English Law, 3rd Ed, p 209).