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A History of the Common Law of Contract: Volume I
Was R3,074.95Now R2,859.70(eB 28597)
Delivery time: Usually within 10 working days.
Country: United KingdomFormat: Hardcover
Publisher: USA Oxford University PressISBN: 9780198255734 Publication date: February 1987 Length: 140mm Width: 216mm Thickness: 43mm Weight: 1025g Pages: 696 Readership: Tertiary education; Professional & scholarly
A History of the Common Law of Contract: Volume I
Was R3,074.95 Now R2,859.70
The common law is one of two major and successful systems of law developed in Western Europe, and in one form or another is now in force not only in the country of its origin but also in the United States and large parts of the British Commonwealth and former parts of the Empire. The common law is one of two major and successful systems of law developed in Western Europe, and in one form or another is now in force not only in the country of its origin but also in the United States and large parts of the British Commonwealth and former parts of the Empire. Perhaps its most typical product is English contract law, developed continuously since the birth of the common law almost wholly by judicial decision. Although in its modern form primarily a product of the nineteenth century, the common law of contract as we know it developed around the action of assumpsit which evolved at the close of the fourteenth century, and many of its characteristic doctrines first emerged in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This book, which takes the story up to 1677 (the date of statute of frauds) forms the first part of the history of contract law, and is written primarily from a doctrinal standpoint.
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