The lawes of Virginia now in force: collected out of the assembly records and digested into one volume: revised and confirmed by the Grand Assembly held at James-City by prorogation the 23d of March 1661 in the 13th year of the reign of our soveraign lord King Charles the II.
The acts of Assembly, now in force, in the colony of Virginia.: With the titles of such as are expired, or repealed ; notes in the margin, shewing how, and at what time they were repealed: and an exact table to the whole.: Publish’d pursuant to an order of the General Assembly.
Richard E. Lee’s letter, the attorney general’s opinion, and the affidavits accompanying the governor’s communicaton to the General Assembly, relative to the conduct of Doctor John K. Read, a magistrate of the borough of Norfolk.
Richard E. Lee’s letter, the attorney general’s opinion, and the affidavits accompanying the governor’s communicaton to the General Assembly, relative to the conduct of Doctor John K. Read, a magistrate of the borough of Norfolk.
Proceedings of the Virginia Assembly, on the answers of sundry states to their resolutions, passed in December, 1798.
Report of the committee to whom committed the proceedings of sundry of the other states, in answer to the resolutions of the General Assembly, of the === day of ===
Virginia, in the House of Delegates, Thursday, 28th November, 1793: resolved, that the state cannot, under the Constitution of the United States, be made a defendant at the suit of any individual or individuals, and that the decision of the Supreme Foederal Court, that a state may be placed in that situation, is incompatible with, and dangerous to the sovereignty and independence of the individual states, as the same tends to a general consolidation of these confederated republicks.
An address of the fifty-eight Federal members of the Virginia legislature to their fellow-citizens, in January, 1799.
“State action” and the 14th amendment: a study of judicial misinterpretation
Address of the minority of the legislatur[e] of Virginia, to their fellow citizens.
In the House of Delegates, Friday, January 11, 1799.: the General Assembly of Virginia considering that the privation of personal rights solemnly sanctioned by the Constitution and laws of the United States, is arbitrary and unjust …
Virginia, to wit: General Assembly begun and held at the Capitol in the city of Richmond on Monday the fifteenth day of October in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty seven: an Act concerning the convention to be held in June next, passed December 12th, 1787.
Journals of the House of Delegates and Senate of Virginia, including a joint assembly. Sessions held in the reconstructed capitol at Williamsburg, Saturday, January 25, 1958.
Labor laws and mining laws of Virginia.
Labor laws of Virginia: reprinted from the code of Virginia of 1950 and the 1985 cumulative supplement
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