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BY HENRY ROSCOE, Esq.

OF THE INNER TEMPLE, BARRISTER AT LAW.

Second Edition,

WITH CONSIDERABLE ADDITIONS, EMBODYING ALL THE RECENT
ALTERATIONS IN THE LAW,

BY T. C. GRANGER, Esq.

BARRISTER AT LAW.

WITH NOTES AND REFERENCES TO AMERICAN DECISIONS AND TO THE ENGLISH
COMMON LAW AND ECCLESIASTICAL REPORTS,

BY GEORGE SHARSWOOD,

ONE OF THE VICE-PROVOSTS OF THE LAW ACADEMY OF PHILADELPHIA.

STANFORD LIBRARY

PHILADELPHIA:

T. & J. W. JOHNSON, LAW BOOKSELLERS,
SUCCESSORS TO NICKLIN & JOHNSON,

No. 5, MINOR STREET.

1840.

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year eighteen hundred and forty,

By T. & J. W. JOHNSON,

In the Office of the Clerk of the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

350674

ADVERTISEMENT

TO THE FIRST AMERICAN EDITION.

MR. ROSCOE's merits as a Digester are already well known to the Profession, and it is only necessary to say, that in his Digest of Criminal Evidence, he has evinced his usual ability, fidelity, and research. Not only has he clearly unfolded and explained the general principles of this branch of the science of legal evidence, for the use of the student, but he has supplied what has long been a desideratum, a complete vade mecum to the criminal lawyer. The nature of criminal practice, which allows the advocate no time for study or research, renders such a work peculiarly valuable, and the arrangement adopted makes immediate reference easy, without the aid of the Index. In this respect it is decidedly preferable to "M'Nally's Evidence," which, whatever may have been its merits, the ensuing volume, from the number and importance of the later cases which it contains, seems calculated entirely to supersede.

The American Editor has endeavored to keep in view the object of the book, and to give all the important cases by way of reference, accompanied with a condensed note or index to the matter where the text does not furnish it. If he has succeeded by this means in enhancing the value of the work to the American advocate, as a book of immediate reference, his aim has been accomplished. He has added also references to the editions of English Common Law and Ecclesiastical Reports, published in this country, and to the Fifth American Edition of Starkie on Evidence, wherever the reference in the text has not been to the Second London Edition, the entirely new and improved arrangement of the matter of that valuable Treatise in the last London and American editions rendering it necessary.

Philadelphia, December, 1835.

G. S.

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