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Articles 1 - 12 of 12

Full-Text Articles in Law

Statutes-Time Of Taking Effect Dec 1938

Statutes-Time Of Taking Effect

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


"Extra Time For Overtime" Now Law, Frank E. Cooper Nov 1938

"Extra Time For Overtime" Now Law, Frank E. Cooper

Michigan Law Review

The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 presents a great many legal and practical problems of importance commensurate with the comprehensiveness of the act itself, which is probably the most far-reaching of the New Deal statutes since the N. R. A. The act is conceived on the theory that any physical handling of goods destined to be subsequently shipped to another state is an act so closely and substantially related to the flow of interstate commerce as to be subject to Congressional regulation, and thus depends for its validity upon an extension of the theories approved in the Wagner Act …


Securities Legislation - Securities Act Of 1933 - Registration Statement - "Material Contract'', Gerald M. Stevens Jun 1938

Securities Legislation - Securities Act Of 1933 - Registration Statement - "Material Contract'', Gerald M. Stevens

Michigan Law Review

A registrant under the Securities Act of 1933 had borrowed from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation $200,000, payment of which was secured by mortgage of most of the debtor's assets. Registrant still owed $136,000 overdue when it filed its amended registration statement. It said therein that it had applied to the RFC for an eighteen-months extension of the debt and that the application had not then been acted upon. After the statement was filed but before it became effective, the RFC denied registrant extension of the debt and made a counter proposal for payment in part and extension in part. In …


Corporations - Interpretation Of The "Public Offering" Exemption Of The Federal Securities Act And State Blue-Sky Laws, Gerald L. Stoetzer Feb 1938

Corporations - Interpretation Of The "Public Offering" Exemption Of The Federal Securities Act And State Blue-Sky Laws, Gerald L. Stoetzer

Michigan Law Review

Section 5 of the Federal Securities Act of 1933, as amended, declares that it shall be unlawful to use any means of transportation or communication in interstate commerce or of the mails to dispose of securities or transmit a prospectus thereon unless a registration statement as required by the act is in effect and unless the prospectus meets the statutory requirements. However, certain securities and transactions are expressly exempted from application of the act. Among the exemptions set out in section 4 are those "transactions by an issuer not involving any public offering."


The Laws Of Jamaica, 1937, Jamaica Jan 1938

The Laws Of Jamaica, 1937, Jamaica

Jamaica

The Laws of Jamaica passed in the year 1937

Published by authority


The Logan Bill, Gregory Hankin Jan 1938

The Logan Bill, Gregory Hankin

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Book Review. The President's Committee On Administrative Management: Report Of The Committee With Studies Of Administrative Management In The Federal Government, Ralph F. Fuchs Jan 1938

Book Review. The President's Committee On Administrative Management: Report Of The Committee With Studies Of Administrative Management In The Federal Government, Ralph F. Fuchs

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Procedure In Administrative Rule-Making, Ralph F. Fuchs Jan 1938

Procedure In Administrative Rule-Making, Ralph F. Fuchs

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


The Retroactive Effect Of Repeal Legislation, Carl Seeman Jr. Jan 1938

The Retroactive Effect Of Repeal Legislation, Carl Seeman Jr.

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Judgments - Declaratory Judgments - Scope Of The Federal Act, Michigan Law Review Jan 1938

Judgments - Declaratory Judgments - Scope Of The Federal Act, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

After the insured had made formal claims for total disability benefits for four years without bringing action to enforce them, the insurer, having at all times denied the total disability of the insured, brought suit in a federal district court for a declaration that it was not liable for the benefits claimed and that the policies had lapsed for non-payment of premiums. The district court granted a motion to dismiss because the insurer failed to present a "controversy" within the Federal Constitution and the Declaratory Judgments Act and because the insurer had no "rights or other legal relations" to be …


Judgments - Federal Declaratory Judgments Act, Charles R. Moon Jr. Jan 1938

Judgments - Federal Declaratory Judgments Act, Charles R. Moon Jr.

Michigan Law Review

Underlying the declaratory judgment is the idea that in an organized and civilized society where law and order are thoroughly recognized and established, coercion is normally unnecessary to settle legal disputes between parties. The belief is that in many lawsuits the plaintiff is not seeking a means of coercing the defendant but that the plaintiff and the defendant merely want a final and conclusive decision of a disputed question on which their legal relations depend. The value of the declaratory judgment lies in that it may be used to settle this dispute, in many cases before any other form of …


Corporations - Alteration Of Charter Under Reserved Power - Change In Remedy To Enforce Stockholders' Liability, Michigan Law Review Jan 1938

Corporations - Alteration Of Charter Under Reserved Power - Change In Remedy To Enforce Stockholders' Liability, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

The constitution of Maryland of I 867 provided that owners of bank stock should be liable for debts of the corporation to an extent equal to the value of the stock owned by them. The bank in which the defendants owned stock was organized under legislation of 1870 containing the provision, "this act and every part of it may be altered from time to time, or repealed by the legislature." The Maryland court held that, while the constitution provided no remedy, the right was conferred on each creditor in his individual capacity to be enforced by separate suits against those …