Foster's Crown Law

A Report of Some Proceedings on the Commission for the Trial of the Rebels in the Year 1746, in the County of Surry; And of Other Crown Cases: to which are Added Discourses Upon a Few Branches of the Crown Law, usually called simply Crown Law or Crown Cases, is an influential treatise on the English criminal law.

It was written by Sir Michael Foster (1689–1763), judge of the King's Bench and later edited by his nephew, Michael Dodson, barrister at law.

The second part, The Discourses, usually called Crown Law is essentially a textbook.

The Report covers the trials of the participants in the second Jacobite Rising of 1745.

This article about a law book of the United Kingdom or its constituent countries is a stub.