Kent, Commentaries on American Law (1826 Though 1830)
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Contents
Versions
Volume One
Part I (Of the Law of Nations)
Part II (Of the Government and Constitutional Jurisprudence of the United States)
Part III (Of the Various Sources of the Municipal Law of the Several States)
Volume Two
Part IV (Of the Law Concerning the Rights of Persons)
Part V (Of the Law Concerning Personal Property)
Volume Three
Part V (Of the Law Concerning Personal Property, CON'T)
Part VI (Of the Law Concerning Real Property)
Volume Four
Part VI (Of the Law Concerning Real Property, CON'T)
About This Text
Author: James Kent
Composed: c.1826 CE
James Kent’s four volume Commentaries on American Law is one of the foremost works of legal scholarship in American history. Kent’s work is based on lectures he gave at Columbia College, the culmination of a 40-year career studying and practicing law in New York. The commentaries discuss the connection between various areas of law operative in the United States, such as constitutional law, state law, international law, individual rights, common law, and commercial law. Kent’s work was distinguished for its discussions of equity law, the field in which he had specialized while serving on the New York Court of Chancery. The work was one of the most widely studied texts on American law by jurists in the antebellum period, and it remains important for scholars and lawyers who are interested in the sources and development of early American jurisprudence.