E L A W. BY RICHARD BURN, LL.D. AND VICAR OF ORTON IN THE COUNTY • The Temporal Law and the Ecclesiastical Law are so « coupled together, that the one cannot fubfift without Lord Coke in Moore's Rep. THE SIXTH EDITION; WITH NOTES AND REFERENCES BARRISTER AT LAW. . IN FOUR VOLUMES. Y LONDON: PRINTED BY A. STRAHAN, Mr. CADELL) in the Strand; 1797 Pe admittas. N E admittas (so called from those words in the writ, bishop at the suit of one who is patron of any church, and he doubts that the bishop will collate a clerk of his own, or admit a clerk presented by another, to the same benefice: then he that doubts it thall have this writ, to prohibit the bishop that he thall not collate or admit any to that church, pending the suit. Terms of the L. (a) New style. See Kalendar. Noturn. NOCTURN, was a service so called, from the an cient chriftians rising in the night to perform the Non-conformists. See Disenters. Notable goods. See Wilis. Rotary publick. 1. A Notary was anciently a {cribe, that only took notes Notary, who. or minutes, and made short draughts of writings, and other instruments, both publick and private. But at this |