[170] Prince, Digest (1837), 190; Head v. Head, 2 Georgia, 193.
[171] In the Compilation of Laws (1812), 61, 83, 113, 202-4, 264, 385, 408, 508, 509, 512, 569, are eighteen divorce acts; many appear in Laws of Ga., 1810-19 (1821), 193-96, 252-63; and eighty-six cases, in Dawson, Compilation, 1819-29 (1831), 141-53.
[172] Prince, Digest (1837), 187, note, gives the following summary, which appears to be inconsistent: "The number of persons divorced by the legislature since the date of the present constitution up to the close of the annual session of 1835, is 291, averaging from 1800 to 1810, about 4; from 1810 to 1820, 8; from 1820 to 1830, 18, and since that time, 28 per annum." If his averages are correct, the total number for the entire period would be about 440.
[173] Nov. 27, 1807: Compilation (1812), 385, 386.
[174] Laws of Ga., 1810-19 (1821), 262, 263.
[175] Const. 1798, Art. III, sec. 9, amendment of 1833, in force 1835: Prince, Digest (1837), 911; Poore, Charters, I, 399.
[176] See chap. xi, sec. 3, c).
[177] Code Napoléon, Nos. 233, 275-97.
[178] Case of Head v. Head, 2 Georgia Reports, 191-211.
[179] Const. of 1798, Art. III, sec. 9, amendment of 1849: Cobb, Digest (1851), 1123; Poore, Charters, I, 401.