The nominate reports, also known as nominative reports,[1][2]named reports and private reports,[3] are the various published collections of law reports of cases in English courts from the Middle Ages to the 1860s.
Most (but not all) are reprinted in the English Reports.[4] They are described as "nominate" (named) in order to distinguish them from the Year Books, which are anonymous.[5]
An example of a nominate report is Edmund F. Moore's Reports of Cases Heard and Determined by the Judicial Committee and the Lords of His Majesty's most Honourable Privy Council on Appeal from the Supreme and Sudder Dewanny Courts in the East Indies, published in London from 1837 to 1873, referred to as Moore's Indian Appeals and cited for example as: Moofti Mohummud Ubdoollah v. Baboo Mootechund 1 M.I.A. 383.
Van Vechten Veeder, "The English Reports, 1292-1865" (1901) 15 Harvard Law Review 1 and 109; reprinted at 2 Select Essays in Anglo American Legal History 123
L W Abbott. Law Reporting in England 1485-1585. (University of London Legal Series No 10). The Athlone Press. London. 1973.
William Searle Holdsworth. "Law Reporting in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries". Anglo-American Legal History Series, No. 5 (1941). Reprinted in Goodhart and Hanbury (eds) Essays in Law and History, by Sir William S Holdsworth, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1946, reprinted by The Lawbook Exchange Limited (Union, New Jersey) 1995. Page 284 et seq.
Chantal Stebbings (ed). Law Reporting in Britain: Proceedings of the Eleventh British Legal History Conference. 1995. Hambledon Press. ISBN1852851295. Google Books. Chapters 5 and 7 to 9.
^By Thomas Flower Ellis and Colin Blackburn and Francis Ellis: Trove. As to Francis Ellis, see "McTaggart (formerly Ellis), Francis" in Alumni Cantabrigienses, vol 3 (Kaile-Ryves), p 286.
^By Thomas Flower Ellis and Francis Ellis: Google Books
^John Hamilton Baker. An Introduction to English Legal History. Third Edition. Butterworth. 1990. Pages 207 to 209. These reports are by Sir John Port.
^Julius J Marke (ed), A Catalogue of the Law Collection at New York University with Selected Annotations, Law Center of New York University, 1953, Library of Congress Catalog card 58-6489, Reprinted by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd (Union, New Jersey) 1999, p 30
^John Hamilton Baker. An Introduction to English Legal History. Third Edition. Butterworth. 1990. Pages 207 to 209.
^Named after Sir Humphrey Winch, but includes, in particular, reports of judicial decisions made after his death that cannot possibly have been reported by him. Some of the decisions might have been reported by Richard Allestree, who died in 1655. (Baker, An Introduction to English Law, 3rd Ed, p 209).
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