Εικόνες σελίδας
PDF
Ηλεκτρ. έκδοση
[blocks in formation]

Constitution. Liability of partners inter se and to third persons, Change of firm. Retirement of partners.

Dissolution. Mining ventures. Joint-stock Companies. Canada Joint-stock Companies Act.

Text-book: Lindley on Partnership.

Lecturer..

PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE.

.MR. HECTOR MCINNES, LL. B.

Subjects of lectures :

Judicature Act and Rules, General Principles of Pleading, and Rules of Practice.

Candidates for the Degree of LL. B. are not required to attend lectures or take the examination in Procedure.

[blocks in formation]

Definitions Torts considered with reference to Crimes and Contracts. Deceit. Slander and Libel. Malicious Prosecution. Conspiracy. Assault and Battery. False Imprisonment. Enticement and Seduction. Tresspass to Property. Conversion. Violation of Water Rights and Rights of Support. Nuisance. Negligence.

[blocks in formation]

SLIII.-The Academic Year. The Academic year consists of one session. The session of 1903-4 will begin on the 1st of September, 1903, and end on the 5th of March, 1904.

§ LIV.--Admission of Students.-(1.) Students may enter the University by (a) entering their names in the Register, and (b) paying the prescribed fees.

(2.) Registered students may, on payment fees, enter any of the classes of the University.

[blocks in formation]

(3.) Students who wish to obtain University Degrees must become undergraduates, They may become undergraduates by (a) passing the Matriculation Examination of the Arts Faculty or a recognized equivalent, or (b) producing certificates of Articled Clerkship or the like in cases where they rely on having passed the preliminary law examinations in their several provinces, and (c) entering their names on the Register as Undergraduates.

(4.) Students who are not undergraduates are known as General Students.

$ LV.-Degree of Bachelor of Laws.-(1.) All candidates for the Degree of LL. B., are required to pass the Matriculation Examination of the Arts Faculty, or a recognized equivalent, to attend not less that five sixths of the lectures given in each subject of the Course of Study, to pass the prescribed Examinations in the subjects of the three years Course of Study, and to argue at least two cases in the Moot Court.

(2.) Graduates and undergraduates in Arts of any recognized College or University, and articled clerks or law students who have passed the preliminary law examinations in any of the Provinces of the Dominion of Canada, in Newfoundland, or in any of the British West India Islands, shall be admitted to the standing of Undergraduates of the First Year in the Faculty of Law, without passing any examination.

(3.) Undergraduates of other Law Schools may, on producing satisfactory certificates of standing, be admitted to similar standing in this Law School if they are found qualified to enter the classes proper to their years. But if their previous courses of study have not corresponded to the course on which they enter in the University, they may be required to take extra classes.

$LVI.-Course of Study for the Degree of

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

The Faculty urgently recommend that students devote their whole time during Sessions to the work of the School, experience having proved that students who undertake office work in addition to the work of their classes, receive comparatively little advantage from the lectures.

§ LVII.-Sessional Examinations.-(1.) The Sessional Examinations will begin next Session on February 26th, 1904.

(2.) Students are forbidden to bring any book or manuscript into the Examination Hall, except by direction of the Examiner, or to give or receive assistance, or to hold any communication with one another at the examinations. If a student violate this rule, he shall be excluded from the Sessional Examinations of the Session, and such other penalty shall be imposed as the Faculty may determine.

(3.) If an Undergraduate fail to pass in two subjects at the Sessional Examinations, he shall be allowed a supplementary Examination in such subject or subjects at the beginning of any subsequent Sesssion.

(4.) If an Undergraduate fail to pass in more than two subjects at any Sessional Examination, he shall lose his Session.

(5.) Undergraduates who wish to present themselves at a Supplementary Examination, must give no tice addressed to the Secretary of the Faculty, Dalhousie Law School, Halifax, on or before August 23rd, 1903.

(6.) The Supplementary Examination for the present year will begin September 2nd, at 3 p M. Fee $5, payable on the day of the Examination.

$ LVIII.-Moot Courts, - Moot Courts. are held weekly.

The case to be argued is stated by the Professor or Lecturer who is to preside. Every candidate for a degree shall be required to take part in at least two arguments at the Moot Court. The senior counsel on either side shall file briefs with the Dean one day before the day on which the case is argued. A record is kept of the values assigned to the arguments made, and these values may be considered by the Faculty in recommending a candidate for his degree.

SLIX.-Residence and Discipline.-The regulations as to residence and discipline in this Faculty are the same as in the Faculty of Arts. See Arts Calendar.

LX.-Academic Costume.-Bachelors of Laws are entitled to wear gowns and hoods. The gowns are similar to those worn by Barristers.at-Law. The hoods are of black silk stuff, with a lining of white silk broidered with gold coloured silk.

§ LXI.-The Library.-The Library is in charge of a Librarian, who will endeavor to make its resources available to the Students, The Library will be found to contain almost all the reports an undergraduate will have occasion to consult.

$ LXII.-Fees.-The following are the fees payable by students of the Faculty of Law. They are in all cases payable in advance.

Students are requested to pay their Class Fees and sign the University Register on Tuesday 1st September, 1903, at 9 A. M., in the office of the Law School.

Registration Fee, payable only by General Students..
Fee for each class attended, per Session, payable by General
Students...

$ 2 00

10 00

Fee for each class attended, per session, payable by students of the Affiliated Course...

6 00

Fee for the classes of the First Year, payable by undergraduates 40 00 Fee for the classes of the Second Year, payable by undergraduates

40 00

Fee for the classes of the Third Year, payable by under

graduates

40 00

Fee for LL. B. dipioma, which is payable before the final exam-
ination, and will be returned in casc of failure..
Fee for the Supplementary Examination

10 00

5 00

Students of any year are permitted to attend lectures in the subjects of an earlier year without extra charge.

Students will not hereafter be admitted to the Lecture Rooms unless they have paid their class fees.

Faculty of Medicine.

THE PRESIDENT, (ex officio.)

GEORGE L. SINCLAIR, M. D.
DONALD A. CAMPBELL, M. D., C. M.
A. W. H. LINDSAY, M. D., C. M.
JOHN STEWART, M. B., C. M.
DANIEL MCNEIL PARKER, M. D.
ANDREW J. CowIE, M. D.
JOHN F. BLACK, M. D.

ALEXANDER P. REID, M. D.
MATTHEW A. CURRY, M. D.

MURRAY MCLAREN, M. D.
WILLIAM TOBIN. F. R. C. S., Ire.
HON. MR. JUSTICE HENRY.

LOUIS M. SILVER, M. B., C. M.
FRED. W. GOODWIN, M. D.

F. U. ANDERSON, M. R. C. S., Eng.
EBENEZER MACKAY, Ph. D.
WILLIAM H. HATTIE, M D.
GEORGE M. CAMPBELL, M. D.
NORMAN E. MACKAY, M. D.
STEPHEN M DIXON, M, A.
H. H. MCKAY, M. D.

MURDOCH CHISHOLM, M. D.

NORMAN F. CUNNINGHAM, M. D.

Dean of the Faculty: DR. SINCLAIR.
Secretary of the Faculty: IR. LINDSAY,

Correspondence should be addressed:

[blocks in formation]

§ LXIII.-Courses of Instruction.*-1. Instruction is provided by the University in the following subjects of the Medical Curriculum :

:

I. CHEMISTRY.

(McLeod Professor.)

Professor

E. MACKAY, PH. D.

Junior Chemistry Class.

Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, 9.-10 A. M.

CLASS WORK.-The lectures in this class deal in an elementary way with the principles of general chemistry. In the earlier part of the course the preparation and characteristic properties of common acids and bases are studied, and then the chemistry of fire, of water and of air, the order of historical development being followed as nearly as possible. When some acquaintance with chemical facts has thus

* It is to be distinctly understood that the program and regulations regarding courses of study and examinations contained in this Calendar hold good for year ending April 30, 1904, only, and that the Faculty while fully sensible of its obligations towards the students, does not hold itself bound to adhere absolutely for the whole four years of a student's course to the conditions now laid down.

« ΠροηγούμενηΣυνέχεια »