NOTE. Candidates are recommended to read Murray's Differential Equations (short course). B.-HEAT, ELECTRICITY AND MAGNETISM AS PRINCIPAL SUBJECTS, WITH LIGHT AND SOUND AS SUBSIDIARY SUBJECTS. C-LIGHT AND SOUND AS PRINCIPAL SUBJECTS, WITH HEAT, ELECTRICITY AND MAGNETISM AS SUBSIDIARY SUBJECTS. Subsidiary Subjects. *Elements of Electricity and Magnetism. Heat (latest edition). D.-BOTANY. Structural Botany. Text-book of Botany, Book II, new edition, by Goebel, translated by Garnsey and Balfour (Clarendon Press Series). Lectures on the Physiology of Plants, translated by H. M. Ward (Clarendon Press Series). History of Botany 1530-1860), translated Fossil Botany, translated by Garnsey and Flora Indica, Clarke's edition (for reference Comparative Anatomy of the Vegetative E-PHYSIOLOGY AND ZOOLOGY. ... ... Schäffer ... ... ... Text-book of Physiology. Text book of Comparative Anatomy, Part I. Outlines of Practical Histology. Elementary Course of Practical Zoology. Essentials of Chemical Physiology. Comparative Embryology. Origin of Species. Handbook of Physiology, edited by Halli- Lessons in Elementary Biology. F.-GEOLOGY AND MINERALOGY. Medlicott and Blanford ... ... ... The questions on J. J. Thomson's work shall not be so difficult as those in Group B. B.L. EXAMINATION, 1906, 1907 AND 1908. (1) The Principles of Jurisprudence; the History and Constitution of the Courts of Law and Legislative Authorities in India. (2) The Law relating to persons in their Public and Private Capacities, including the Law of Testamentary Succession. (3) The Law of Property, including the Law relating to Land Tenures and the Revenne Laws. Maine's Ancient Law; Holland's Elements of Jurisprudence; Cowell's Tagore Law Lectures, 1872; Hunter's "Introduction to Roman Law," 5th edition, Chapters 15; no question should be put the answer to which would involve a knowledge of Latin. Act IX. of 1875 (Majority); Stephen's Commentaries on the Laws of England, 14th edition. 1903, Book I, Book III, Chapters 1-4, and Book IV, Part I, Chapters 2 and 6; Act X. of 1865 (Succession Act), except Parts III-V, XXX, XXXI, and XXXVXL; Act XXI. of 1870 (Hindu Wills Act), except the portions of the Indian Succession Act omitted from the Study of that Act; Act V. of 1881 (Probate); Hindu Law of Wills (being topic No. 14 in Syllabus on page 260); Ameer Ali's Students' Mannal of Muhammadan Law (2nd edition), Part III, Chapter III (Wills); Snell's Principles of Equity, 13th Ed., Part II, Chapter XXII (Infants). Nelson's Law of Property, omitting Chapters 3-14, 16-18; Regulations I., VIII. of 1793, Regulation VIII. of 1819; Regulation XI. of 1825; Act XI. of 1859, omitting (4) The Law of Property, including the Laws of Transfer, Prescription, and Pre-emption. (5) The Law of Contracts and Torts. (6) The Law of Crimes and Criminal Procedure. (7) The Law of Civil Procedure, including the Law of Evidence and the Law of Limitation. (8) The Hindu Law and the Muhammadan Law (with the exception of parts already included) and the Law of Intestate Succession. sections 4, 16, 40-52 and 56-62; Act VIII. of 1885 (Bengal Tenancy Act), Chapters I-VIII, XI, XIV. XV. Act IV. of 1882 (Transfer of Property Act), Act III. of 1877 (Registration Act), sections 17, 18, 48, 49, 50; Act XV. of 1877, sections 26-28 (Prescription); Upendranath Mitra's Indian Law of Prescription and Easements; Hindu Law of Endowments (being topic No 16 in Syllabus on page 260); Ameer Ali's Students' Manual of Muhammadan Law (2nd edition), Part III, Chapters I, II, and IV (Gift, Wakf and Pre-emption); Snell's Principles of Equity, 13th edition, Part I, Part II, Chapter IVI. XVI-XVII (Mortgages, Legal and Equitable), and Part III, Chapters I-IV (Accident, Mistake, Actual Fraud, Constructive Fraud). Anson's Law of Contract; Bigelow's "Law of Torts," 2nd edition, Cambridge University Press, 1903, omitting Chapters 6, 8, 9, 12, 13, 14, 18 and Appendix on Statements of claim; Act IX. of 1872; Act J. of 1877; Snell's Principles of Equity, 13th edition, Part III, Chapters 9-10 (Specific Performance and Injunction). The Indian Penal Code (Act XLV. of 1860); the whole of Chapters 1-5 and such portions of Chapters 6-23 as do not relate exclusively to the amount of punishment to be inflicted for an offence; the Code of Criminal Procedure (Act V. of 1898), omitting Chapters 1, 9, 14, 33-40, 42, 43, 46 (except section 562); Mayne's Criminal Law of India (2nd edition), Part II, Chapters 1, 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, 15. Best "On Evidence," 6th edition, Introduction, Book I, Book IV; the Code of Civil Procedure (Act XIV. of 1882), Chapters 1-9, 11, 12, 15, 17, 19, 21. 22, 30, 31, 33, 35-37, 40-43, 45-47; the Evidence Act (Act I. of 1872); the Limitation Act (Act XV. of 1877), omitting sections 26-28 and Schedule II. Chapter II. sections I-X; Dayabhaga, Mitakshara, Chapter I, Sections I-V; Chapters 1, 2, 5, 11; Hindu Law (as in Syllabus on page 260, except topics 14 and 16); Sirajiya (except the details as to succession of distant kindred); Ameer Ali's Students' Manual of Muhammadan Law (2nd edition), Parts I and II; Act X. of 1865 (Succession Act, Parts III-V). N.B.-No questions will be put involving a discussion of original texts. In studying the Syllabus, any of the following books may be read :- Golapchandra Sarkar's "Hindu Law." Jogendranath Bhattacharyya's "Commentaries on Hindu Law." NOTE. In the list of text-books for the B.L Examination, when any Act is named, it is to be understood to mean that Act with all amendments made up to the 31st March of the year in which the Examination is held. HONOURS IN LAW EXAMINATION, 1906 AND 1907. (1) HINDU LAW OR MUHAMMADAN LAW. |