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ART. 20.] JUSTICES OF THE PEACE AND CONSTABLES. 1801
tices of the peace and four constables; for election district num-
ber four, two justices of the peace and one constable; for elec-
tion district number five, two justices of the peace and one
constable; for election district number six, three justices of the
peace and one constable; for election district number seven, two
justices of the peace and one constable; for election district
number eight, five justices of the peace and four constables;
for election district number nine, three justices of the peace and
one constable; for election district number ten, two justices of
the peace and two constables; and for election district number
eleven, one justice of the peace and one constable.
1880, ch. 113.
133. A certified copy of any judgment of a justice of the
peace of said county, may be recorded in the clerk's office in said
county, and when so recorded shall be a lien upon the real estate
of the defendant, and upon the written order of the plaintiff or
bis attorney, said clerk may issue execution upon such judgment,
directed to the sheriff of said county, as upon judgments rendered
in the circuit court for said county.
P. L. L, (1880,) art, 19, sec. 67.
134. The said clerk shall keep a separate record book, with
an index stating doubly the names of the plaintiff and defendant,
and shall be entitled to twenty-five cents for filing, recording and
indexing every such copy of a judgment.
1884, ch. 510.
135. The several justices of the peace of Somerset, Dorches-
ter, Montgomery, Prince George's, St. Mary's, Talbot, Howard,
Caroline, Kent, Charles, Calvert, Harford, Garrett, Washington,
Wicomico, Anne Arundel and Allegany counties, shall have, in ad-
dition to the jurisdiction which they now possess, and which may
be conferred upon them by or under the laws of this State, juris-
diction concurrent with that exercised by the circuit courts for
said counties in all cases of assault without any felonious intent;
and in all cases of assault and battery, and in all cases of petit
larceny, when the value of the property stolen does not exceed the
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