A dialogue between a lawyer and a country gentleman upon the subject of the game laws, relative to hares, partridges, and pheasants. Wherein is shewn, The several Qualifications to kill Game; the Penalties such Persons are liable to who kill them without such Qualifications; the Manner of recovering such Penalties; the Difference between being subject to the Penalties, and being punished as Trespassers; the Distinction between voluntary and involuntary Trespassers; the necessary Steps to be taken to make wilful Trespassers, and the Consequences of being such; together with some Observations upon these Laws. To which are added Three Tables, Shewing at one View, the Offences,-The Statutes creating them,-the Persons to whom the Penalties are given,-the Manner of Recovery,-And lastly the several Penalties a Person may be liable to by one Act. With a Letter to John Glynn, Esq; Serjeant at Law, and Representative of the County of Middlesex, Upon the Penal Laws of this Country by a gentleman of Lincoln's-Inn, a freeholder of Middlesex
von: Purlewent, Samuel
Veröffentlicht: (1771)