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ON

Presumptions of Law and Fact,

WITH THE

THEORY AND RULES

OF

PRESUMPTIVE OR CIRCUMSTANTIAL PROOF

IN

CRIMINAL CASES.

By W. M. BEST, A. M., LL.B.,

OF GRAY'S INN, ESQ., BARRISTER AT LAW.

"Materia quam aggressuri sumus valde utilis est, et quotidianâ in practicâ; sed confusa,
inextricabilis ferè; communisque est et jurisconsultoribus et rhetoribus in genere judi-
ciali."-Alciatus Tractatus de Præsumptionibus, Pars 1, § 1.

LONDON:

S. SWEET, 1, CHANCERY LANE, FLEET STREET,
Law Bookseller and Publisher:

HODGES & SMITH, COLLEGE GREEN, DUBLIN.

IMASCENSIS.

LONDON:

W. M'DOWALL, PRINTER, PEMBERTON ROW,

GOUGH SQUARE.

ΤΟ

THE RIGHT HONORABLE

SIR JAMES PARKE, KNT.,

ONE OF THE

BARONS OF HER MAJESTY'S COURT OF EXCHEQUER, ETC.,

This Work

18,

BY HIS PERMISSION,

AND WITH THE DEEPEST FEELINGS OF RESPECT,

VERY HUMBLY DEDICATED BY

THE AUTHOR.

1

PREFACE.

THE importance of a right perception of the theory and limits of legal presumptions, and of the principles of presumptive reasoning in criminal cases, will not, it is apprehended, be questioned. But, although treatises devoted exclusively to the latter have appeared from time to time (a), and one class of presumptions has furnished matter for a volume (b), no attempt has hitherto been made to treat, in a systematic manner (c), the whole subject as understood and acted on in courts of law. To remedy this defect is the object of the present work.

(a) Wills on Circumstantial Evidence, London, 1838; Theory of Presumptive Proof, attributed to Mr. Phillips, London, 1815, &c.

(b) A Treatise on the Doctrine of Presumption and Presumptive Evidence, affecting the Title to Real and Personal Property, by John H. Matthews, Esq., Barrister-at-Law, London, 1827.

(c) The civilians have been less remiss in this respect, and the author takes the opportunity of

acknowledging the assistance he has derived from their labours. Besides various treatises on proof in general, and the commentaries on the titles "De Probationibus et Præsumptionibus," in the Digest, (lib. 22, tit. 3), and "De Probationibus," in the Code, (lib. 4, tit. 19), the work of Menochius on Presumptions alone extends to two volumes folio, and the treatise on the same subject by Alciatus is of a fair length.

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