The country-mans counsellour, or, Every man made his own lawyer
Plainly shewing the nature, and offices of all courts as Kings bench, common pleas, chancery, exchequer, marshalsey, &c. VVith the just feas for all vvrits & proceedings in each court; allowed and established by act of Parliament. As also how to sue a man to the out-lawry, or to reverse the same: to pass a fine'er recovery, to sue an attorney or clerk, to get an injunctionin chanciry to stop your advercsaries proceedings at law, to sue in forma pauperis, &c. VVith approved presidents, and easie directions for all persons, how to make according to law, bonds, bills, acquittances, general releases, letters of attorney, bills of sale, vvills, &c. work most useful to all persons, the like not extant, and now published for a general good. With allowance
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Author
Publication
1682 - Printed for J. Clarke at the Bible and Harp near the hospital gate in West-smith-Field, London, England
Language
English
Word Count
5,500 words, Guess
Page Count
22 pages
Identifiers
- OCLC Control Number64551632
- Open LibraryOL43818199M
Alternate Titles
- Every man made his own lawyer
Subjects
Places
Series Statement
- Early English books online
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