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See also: body of rules and principles See also: relating to merchants and See also: mercantile transactions, laid down by merchants themselves for the purpose of regulating their dealings
.
It was composed of such usages and customs as were See also: common to merchants and traders in all parts of See also: Europe, varied slightly in different localities by See also: special peculiarities
.
The See also: law See also: merchant owed its origin to the fact that the See also: civil law was not sufficiently responsive to the growing demands of commerce, as well as to the fact that See also: trade in pre-See also: medieval times was practically in the hands of those who might be termed cosmopolitan merchants, who wanted a prompt and effective jurisdiction
.
It was administered for the most See also: part in special courts, such as those of the See also: gilds in See also: Italy, or the See also: fair courts of See also: Germany and See also: France, or as in See also: England, in courts of the See also: staple or piepowder (see also See also: SEA See also: LAWS)
.
The See also: history of the law merchant in England is divided into three stages: the first See also: prior to the See also: time of See also: Coke, when it was a special kind of law—as distinct from the common law—administered in special courts for a special class of the community (i.e. the mercantile); the second stage was one of transition, the law merchant being administered in the common law courts, but as a body of customs, to be proved as a fact in each individual See also: case of doubt; the third stage, which has continued to the See also: present See also: day, See also: dates from the See also: presidency over the See also: king's bench of
See also: Lord Mansfield (q.v.), under whom it was moulded into the mercantile law of to-day
.
To the law merchant See also: modern See also: English law owes the fundamental principles in the law of partnership, negotiable See also: instruments and trade marks
.
See G
.
Malynes, Consuetude vel lex mercatoria (See also: London, 1622); W
.
See also: Mitchell, The Early History of the Law Merchant (Cambridge, 1904) ; J
.
W
.
See also: Smith, Mercantile Law (ed
.
See also: Hart and Simey, 1905)
.
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