Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765-1769)Sir William Blackstone Of Issue and Demurrer
NOTES

     1.    Append. No. III. § 6.
     2.    Ibid.
     3.    Append. No. II. § 4.
     4.    Cic. de Ocator. l. I. c. 38.
     5.    Cro. Eliz. 49.
     6.    Append. No. II. § 4. No. III. § 6.
     7.    Juv. XV. III.
     8.    c. 15.
     9.    Mod. Un. Hist. XX. 211.
   10.    Ibid. XXiX. 235.
   11.    Mirr. c. 4. § 3.
   12.    The following sentence, "si quis ad battalia curte sua exierit, if any one goes out of his own court to fight," etc. may raise a smile in the student as a flaming modern anglicism: but he may meet with it, among others of the same stamp, in the laws of the Burgundians on the continent, before the end of the fifth century. (Add. I. c. 5. § 2.)
   13.    Pref. Rep.
   14.    Pref. ad Eadmer.
   15.    Nov. I. c. I.
   16.    Nov. 8. edict. Constantinop.
   17.    Nov. 117. c. I.
   18.    Ibid. c. 8.
   19.    Nov. 82. c. II.
   20.    Nov. 78. c. 2.
   21.    See pag. 149.
   22.    Philosoph. natural. c. I. § 28, etc.
   23.    For instance, these words, "secundum formam statuti," are now converted into seven, "according to the form of the statute."
   24.    de concept. digest. § 13.