This is a thought-provoking exploration of the development of civil law in California from 1850 to 1890. Focusing upon contract landlord and tenant mortgage tort and admiralty law Bakken argues that the formulation of the law generally responded to socioeconomic forces. He also asserts that on the operational level the law''s reach was limited by ambiguities judicial inexactitude and mistakes made by the bar. Essentially the broad policy goals of frontier law worked to stimulate marketplace forces by facilitating certain transactions. Entrepreneurs often received the aid of the developing law but were frustrated by it at other times. Bakken scrutinizes the role of judges legislators lawyers and laymen in contributing to this process. Finally he demonstrates that the law was less certain and the policy considerations less clear when the law actually functioned on an operational level in society.
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