page 15
No. 8. AN ACT To provide for the transfer of certain cases pending, and undetermined before the justices of the peace for the parish of Orleans, and before the Third District Court for the parish of Orleans, to the city courts of New Orleans.
Approved February 20, 1880.
page 29
No. 29. AN ACT To provide for the transfer of causes pending in the courts established by the Constitution of 1868 to the courts established by the Constitution of 1879.
Approved March 10, 1880.
page 44
No. 45. AN ACT To organize the city courts in the city of New Orleans; to regulate the territorial jurisdiction thereof and proceedings therein, and to fix the salaries of the judges.
Approved March 29, 1880.
page 57
No. 59. AN ACT Relative to the payment of costs of court in contested election cases and in cases in which the right to an office is claimed.
Approved April 5, 1880.
page 106
No. 81. AN ACT Creating an additional justice of the peace and constable for the eighth ward of the parish of Avoyelles.
Approved April 10, 1880.
page 115
No. 89. AN ACT To create an additional justice of the peace and constable in ward No. nine (9), in the parish of Natchitoches, to be located on Rigolet Bon Dieu, in said parish : to define its jurisdiction and to provide for the election of the same, and to prescribe the manner of filling the same.
page 118
No. 92. AN ACT To amend and re-enact an act entitled “An act to provide for supplying the loss of public records and other papers consumed by the burning of the court-house in the parish of Livingston on the night of the fourteenth day of October, eighteen hundred and seventy-five,” approved February 23, 1877.
page 139
No. 112. AN ACT To amend and re-enact section 3373 of the Revised Statutes of 1870, relative to public roads.
page 143
No. 118. ADDRESS Removing from office Louis E. Laloire, justice of the peace of the first ward of the parish of St. Martin.
page 184
No. 135. AN ACT Relative to suits and the trial thereof before the district Courts of the State, for the removal from office of district attorneys, clerks of courts, sheriffs, coroners, recorders, justices of the peace, and of all other parish, municipal or ward officers, under the provisions of articles one hundred and ninety-six and two hundred and one of the State Constitution ; to provide for motions for new trials, and for appeals from interlocutory decrees that might cause irreparable injury, and from all final judgments in such suits.