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The Theory And Practice Of Pre-Trial Procedure, Edson R. Sunderland
The Theory And Practice Of Pre-Trial Procedure, Edson R. Sunderland
Michigan Law Review
Pre-trial civil procedure under the English common-law system consisted only of pleading. Whatever the rules of pleading could accomplish in the way of defining and restricting issues contributed to the efficiency of the trial. What could not be done by the rules of pleading could not be done at all.
The great weakness of pleading as a means for developing and presenting issues of fact for trial lay in its total lack of any means for testing the factual basis for the pleader's allegations and denials. They might rest upon the soundest evidence, or they might rest upon nothing at …
Conditional Wills, Alvin E. Evans
Conditional Wills, Alvin E. Evans
Michigan Law Review
The discovery of what the language of a testator means is a constant duty of the courts. The task in the case of wills conditional in form frequently is to inquire whether the conditional language is merely formal and used by way of inducement or is intended to be taken literally. Clear cut and uniformly dependable tests as guides to such inquiry do not exist.
The Doctrine Of Stare Decisis In British Courts Of Last Resort, John A. Fairlie
The Doctrine Of Stare Decisis In British Courts Of Last Resort, John A. Fairlie
Michigan Law Review
The House of Lords and the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council are both British courts of last resort. The House of Lords is the final court for the United Kingdom and reviews cases from the English Court of Appeals and equivalent courts of Scotland and Northern Ireland; the Judicial Committee hears appeals of cases from the colonies and dominions and ecclesiastical cases.
Readers of Professor Gray's lectures on The Nature and Sources of the Law are aware of the distinction he notes between the attitude of the British House of Lords, on the one hand, and the Judicial Committee …