17 results
Search Results
2. LEGAL TENDER.
- Author
-
Thayer, James B.
- Subjects
- *
MONEY , *LEGAL tender , *FINANCE , *BANK notes - Abstract
Examines the clauses of the Constitution relating to money. Description of the specifications of the power which is given to the Congress of the United States in the Constitution relating to money; Analysis of the clauses of the Constitution about the emission of bills and making paper a legal tender; Explanation of the power of Congress in making a paper currency.
- Published
- 1887
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. NOTES.
- Subjects
- *
COMMON law , *CIVIL law , *DOMESTIC relations , *CONSTITUTIONAL courts , *LIBEL & slander - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of various papers related to the civil and common law. One of the paper discussed is "Death by Wrongful Act in the Civil Law," issued by the Common Law Technique and Civil Law Authorities. In Panama R. R. Co. v. Rock, the U.S. Supreme Court, reversing the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, holds that a husband cannot maintain an action for wrongfully causing the death of his wife in the Canal Zone. This proposition, sufficiently startling of itself in the year 1924, becomes more surprising when one turns to the opinion of the majority of the court and perceive its presuppositions. Another paper discussed is "Promise to Discharge Promisee's Debt to a Third Party: Effect of a Suretyship Relation Between Promisor and Promisee Upon Promisee's Rights."
- Published
- 1925
4. CONCERNING SEARCHES AND SEIZURES.
- Author
-
Fraenkel, Osmond K.
- Subjects
- *
CONSTITUTIONAL amendments , *SEARCHES & seizures (Law) , *CIVIL rights , *LAW enforcement , *CONSTITUTIONAL amendments (United States) - Abstract
The article presents information on various amendments to the Constitution of the U.S., and different laws related to searches and seizures of property and papers. The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the U.S. discusses about the right of people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures and issue of warrants. Constitutional provisions more or less similar to this one exist in all the states, except in New York where such a limitation appears in the Civil Rights Law. It is well known that the adoption in 1791 of the first ten amendments resulted from the agitation for a Bill of Rights which attended the ratification of the Constitution.
- Published
- 1921
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. NOTES.
- Author
-
J. L. T.
- Subjects
- *
ADMINISTRATIVE law , *LEGISLATIVE amendments , *TRANSPORTATION , *LEGISLATIVE bills , *MILITARY law , *CIVIL rights - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of various papers related to legislation of the U.S. One of the papers discussed is "The Constitutionality of the Pipe-Line Amendment." By an amendment to the Interstate Commerce Act adopted in 1906 all persons engaged in the transportation of oil by interstate pipelines are placed on the footing of common carriers. A recent decision of the Commerce Court holding this amendment invalid because it applies to pipelines, which have never professed to carry for the public, presents a constitutional question of considerable importance. Another paper discussed is "Martial Law." Military jurisdiction is of three kinds. The universal demand for security to person and property, which has everywhere, expressed itself in the form of constitutional guarantees against interference with individual rights.
- Published
- 1913
6. GOVERNMENT REGULATION.
- Subjects
- *
CLASSIFIED advertising , *PRINT advertising , *NEWSPAPER advertising - Abstract
The article reports that the U.S. Supreme Court, in Times-Picayune Publishing Co. versus United States, upheld a tying arrangement for newspaper advertising as not violative of the Sherman Act, while enunciating criteria which may make it easier to eliminate tying arrangements under the Clayton Act. The defendant, publisher of the only morning daily newspaper in New Orleans, the Times- Picayune, and one of the two evening papers, the States, adopted a unit system requiring that classified and national display advertisements be placed in both papers. The Supreme Court reversed the District Court's finding that the unit system was a tying arrangement violating Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act.
- Published
- 1953
7. LEADING LEGAL ARTICLES.
- Subjects
- *
COMMON law , *LEGAL procedure , *LEGAL costs , *LAW - Abstract
The article presents information about papers related to the U.S. law published in various journals. The provisions of the Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the Federal Constitution guaranteeing common law procedure, including the right of indictment and trial by jury do not extend to the inhabitants of our insular possessions. It would seem that this applies equally to all the territories of the United States. It is suggested, there can be no distinction between the organized and the unorganized territories. The privileges guaranteed by the Bill of Rights in fact extend to the former only by virtue of an Act of Congress or a treaty provision.
- Published
- 1906
8. RECENT PROGRESS TOWARDS AGREEMENT ON RULES TO PREVENT A CONFLICT OF LAWS,.
- Author
-
Baldwin, Simeon E.
- Subjects
- *
CONFLICT of laws , *AMERICAN law , *NEGOTIABLE instruments , *COMMERCIAL law - Abstract
The article comments on the advancements in the agreement on rules to prevent a conflict of laws. The inconvenience resulting from a conflict of laws between the states of the U.S. on the subject of commercial paper has of late been largely avoided by the general adoption of the Negotiable Instruments' Act, framed by the Annual Conference of the States for Promoting Uniform Legislation. It is from the action of this body that the most is to be hoped for in the future in smoothing the way to general agreement within the United States as to matters of private law.
- Published
- 1904
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Notes.
- Subjects
- *
LEGAL judgments , *CIVIL service , *LEGAL certainty , *NEGOTIABLE instruments , *PLEADING - Abstract
Presents several court cases and rulings in the U.S. published in the November 1896 issue of the "Harvard Law Review." Preference of veterans in the Massachusetts civil service; Certainty as a formal requisite of negotiable paper; Common law pleading; Physical suffering resulting from mental shock.
- Published
- 1896
10. MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS.
- Author
-
Frankfurter, Felix
- Subjects
- *
JUDGES , *LEGAL opinions , *LEGAL literature , *LAW reform - Abstract
The article presents a profile of justice Louis D. Brandeis, who has been considered as a great contributor to the American history, through his writings on various legal issues. The article notes that, despite his impersonal and almost ascetic style, Brandeis furnished a map of his mind in his occasional papers, in his testimony before legislative committees, and, above all, in his more than five hundred opinions. Brandeis has shown the way to several others, by his passionate dedication of great gifts to great purposes, by his use of the versatile resources of law for the liberation and enrichment of the potentialities of man.
- Published
- 1941
11. NOTES.
- Subjects
- *
ACTIONS & defenses (Law) , *LEGISLATIVE bills , *BILLS of lading , *CONTRACTS , *INTRASTATE commerce - Abstract
This article presents information about recent law cases. In United States v. Ferger, however, it has recently been held that section 41 of the Pomerene Act, which makes criminal the forging of an interstate bill of lading, is unconstitutional, since the forged bills of lading were nothing but pieces of paper fraudulently inscribed. They were not receipts for goods. They did not affect interstate commerce. The court excluded from contemplation, as possibly presenting a different question, the counterfeiting of an existing genuine interstate bill of lading.
- Published
- 1919
12. RECENT CASES.
- Subjects
- *
ACTIONS & defenses (Law) , *INSURANCE policies , *CONTRACTS , *TRIALS (Law) , *INVOICES - Abstract
The article discusses various lawsuits in the U.S. One of the lawsuits discussed is Moore v. Empire Land Co. The plaintiff's grantor took possession of certain land without any paper title and held it adversely for seven years. He then conveyed the surface of the land to X., reserving the minerals; and X. and his grantees entering held possession of the surface for the remainder of the statutory period, no one meanwhile operating the mines. Thereafter the plaintiff bought the minerals from the grantor, and brings this bill to quiet his title to them. Another case discussed is Condon v. Exton-Hall Brokerage and Vessel Agency. The defendant, at the plaintiff's request, undertook gratuitously to procure the immediate cancellation of an insurance policy issued by the plaintiff. The defendant directed its local correspondent to investigate the risk with a view to action in the future.
- Published
- 1913
13. RECENT CASES.
- Subjects
- *
ACTIONS & defenses (Law) , *CIVIL penalties , *CHURCH property , *INTERSTATE commerce - Abstract
Presents several cases in the U.S. United States v. St. Regis Paper Co. on civil penalties for violation of Federal Trade Commission order; Serbian Eastern Orthodox Diocese for the U.S. and Canada v. Ocokoljick on chruch property disputes; Garden State Dairies Inc. v. Sills on commerce clause.
- Published
- 1967
14. THOMAS REED POWELL.
- Author
-
Freund, Paul A.
- Subjects
- *
LAW teachers , *LEGAL education , *LEGAL professions ,BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
The article presents a memoir of U.S. legal scholar Thomas Reed Powell. The article author states that although Powell founded no school and espoused no doctrinal creed, his teaching and writing were distinctive, unmistakable, and inimitable. His published papers, numbering close to two hundred essays, are marked by that relentless analysis of judicial rhetoric, that irreverent uncloaking of disreputable logic, that playfulness in the service of intellectual morality, which made him a fearsome delight to students and friends. If one were to revert after all to the language of science and identify a phenomenon with his name, it would have to be called the Powell Effect.
- Published
- 1956
15. LEGAL RESTRICTION OF COMPETITION IN THE REGULATED INDUSTRIES: AN ABDICATION OF JUDICIAL RESPONSIBILITY.
- Author
-
Schwartz, Louis B.
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC policy , *COST effectiveness , *COMMERCIAL law , *ECONOMIC competition , *TRADE regulation - Abstract
The article informs that the American political tradition and the antitrust laws make competitive free enterprise both a norm in practice and an ideal of national policy. Those who favor this policy do so on various grounds. They believe that rivalry among competing sellers will lead to improvement of product and reduced prices. The downward pressure on selling prices will also compel a striving for increased efficiency and reduced costs. It is the purpose of this paper to review the work of these administrative agencies and the courts in formulating national economic policy in this area. The central and recurrent problem will be the relative weight to be accorded to the policy of maintaining competition in an industry which by hypothesis is to be governed by competition only to a limited extent.
- Published
- 1954
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. THE DRAFTING OF PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENTS.
- Author
-
Worcester, Dean K.
- Subjects
- *
AMERICAN law , *PARTNERSHIP agreements , *PARTNERSHIP interest , *PARTNERSHIP allocations , *BUSINESS partnerships - Abstract
The article focuses on issues related to the drafting of partnership agreements in the U.S. This paper will deal chiefly with the major features of this form and its adaptation to various business situations. The partners may agree on anything they wish. The chief task of the draftsman is to ascertain what they do wish, to think out in advance the typical problems that are likely to arise, to discuss these with his clients, to work out decisions as to how they are to be treated, and to set the results down in clear language.
- Published
- 1950
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. BOOKS AND PERIODICALS.
- Subjects
- *
ACTIONS & defenses (Law) , *INTERNATIONAL law , *EXTRAORDINARY remedies - Abstract
The article discusses a paper and various books related to the lawsuits in the U.S. The paper discussed is "The Legal Nature of International Law," by George B. Scott. In this paper, the writer maintains two propositions: first, that the quality of enforceability and the existence of a sanction are not essential to the definition of law; secondly, that assuming a sanction to be requisite, one is present in the realm of international law. Some of the books discussed are "The Abuse of New Trials," by Everett P. Wheeler, "The Act of Congress Permitting Suits Against Federal Receivers: Injunctions From State Courts," by W.A. Coutts and "Dissenting Opinions," by V.H. Roberts.
- Published
- 1905
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.