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Negotiable Instruments and the Federal Courts in Antebellum American Business*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 June 2012
Abstract
That human needs and social realities are the roots of all systems of jurisprudence is nowhere more demonstrable than in the evolution of the law of business. Professor Freyer shows that neither the English common law of negotiable instruments nor the modifications made in it in the colonial era were adequate in the lusty, far-flung, and rapidly growing young nation that the Constitution of the United States created. Innovation, he reveals, promptly followed.
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- Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 1976
References
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