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Articles 91 - 105 of 105
Full-Text Articles in Law
Property Rights In The Balance - The Burger Court And Constitutional Property, Elizabeth G. Patterson
Property Rights In The Balance - The Burger Court And Constitutional Property, Elizabeth G. Patterson
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
Property As A Constitutional Right, Frank I. Michelman
Property As A Constitutional Right, Frank I. Michelman
Washington and Lee Law Review
No abstract provided.
Indian Claims In The Beds Of Oklahoma Watercourses, Michael M. Gibson
Indian Claims In The Beds Of Oklahoma Watercourses, Michael M. Gibson
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Uniform Disposition Of Community Property Rights At Death Act, Sarah N. Welling
The Uniform Disposition Of Community Property Rights At Death Act, Sarah N. Welling
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Civil Rights; Challenging Tribal Membership Ordinance; Constitutional Law: Indigent Indians' Right To Counsel In Tribal Court; Constitutional Law: Tribal Judge Serving As Tribal Prosecutor As Violation Of Indian Civil Rights Act; Indian Lands: Termination Of Aboriginal Land Rights; Jurisdiction: Exhaustion Of Tribal Remedies Required; Jurisdiction: State Jurisdiction Where "Reservation" Lands Not Owned By Indians; Land Rights: Determination Of Property Rights In Mineral Interests Under Allotted Lands
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Protection Of Industrial Property Rights In The European Economic Community, Ronald L. Smallwood
The Protection Of Industrial Property Rights In The European Economic Community, Ronald L. Smallwood
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
This study of European Economic Community (EEC) industrial property rights discusses trademarks, patents, and copyrights. The legal foundation for the protection of these industrial property rights in the EEC is derived from article 36 of the EEC Treaty, which expressly allows an exception to the prohibition of restrictions against the free movement of goods within the EEC when justified by the protection of industrial property, and article 222, which encompasses the protection of industrial property in the Member States. Although decisions of the Court of Justice on industrial property rights are infrequent, their ramifications are significant throughout the Community since …
Licensing In The Eastern Bloc, Lajos Schmidt
Licensing In The Eastern Bloc, Lajos Schmidt
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
This article will discuss the legal problems faced by American enterprises desiring to license industrial property rights--principally patents, trademarks and know-how--in Eastern Europe. Licensing in seven countries--the Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) and Bulgaria--will be examined. Of course, these countries form separate and independent legal and political jurisdictions; and even their cultural backgrounds differ. Any generalization about them must be taken in that context. Nonetheless, each of these countries is governed by similar political and economic principles--in particular, the principle of centralized economic planning. These common factors are reflected in common problems faced …
Bosch And The Binding Effect Of State Court Adjudications Upon Subsequent Federal Tax Litigation, William E. Martin
Bosch And The Binding Effect Of State Court Adjudications Upon Subsequent Federal Tax Litigation, William E. Martin
Vanderbilt Law Review
One of the unique facets of American federalism involves the interaction of state court decrees which determine or characterize an individual's property rights with subsequent federal court litigation which imposes the federal tax burden upon those rights. While Congress determines what relationships are to be taxed, state law creates and state court adjudications measure these relationships.' In 1934 the Supreme Court formulated the standard that the state court decision was to be followed by a federal tax court in the absence of collusion, since the decree established the state "law" in regard to the relevant property. However, the definitional and …
The Real Estate Broker's Undertaking, William E. Wallace
The Real Estate Broker's Undertaking, William E. Wallace
Vanderbilt Law Review
In earlier articles I have discussed problems dealing with the enunciation and expression of listing agreements, their formal import' and the effect of one important segment of many of the attendant" payment" clauses. The former article concerned itself with the general problem of the relationship existing between a real property owner and his broker, while the latter dealt with the significance of words by which the payment clause of a brokerage agreement was introduced and with the effect of a wrongful default by the landowner. The present article will consider the legal significance of the actual terms employed to designate …
Marriage In The Conflict Of Laws, Charles W. Taintor, Ii
Marriage In The Conflict Of Laws, Charles W. Taintor, Ii
Vanderbilt Law Review
It must first be recognized that three different types of problems are raised in this field by what purport to be marriages: problems concerning the creation of the relationship of man and wife; those concerning the method whereby the parties signify their consents to the assumption of the relationship; and those concerning the legal protection accorded to claims arising therefrom. These involve, respectively, the status, the ceremony, and the incidents' of marriage.
It has often been said or assumed in the past that the laws of the domicile or domiciles of the parties at the time of the ceremony govern …
Equitable Protection Of Personal Or Individual Rights, William Q. De Funiak
Equitable Protection Of Personal Or Individual Rights, William Q. De Funiak
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Municipal Corporations - Liability To Abutting Property Owner For Negligence In Spraying Trees On Highway, Arthur A. Greene Jr.
Municipal Corporations - Liability To Abutting Property Owner For Negligence In Spraying Trees On Highway, Arthur A. Greene Jr.
Michigan Law Review
The defendant, a municipal corporation, used a poison spray on the trees on the highway under the authority and express duty of certain statutes that declared browntail moths and other insects a nuisance. This was done in such a manner that a part of the spray fell on the abutting land of the plaintiff, and caused the death of her poultry. The plaintiff instituted this action, relying on two counts, one alleging negligence and the other alleging an unreasonable use of the highway. Held, that the plaintiff could not recover on the first count because the abatement of this …
Contracts - Moral Obligation As Consideration - Promise To Pay For Benefits Previously Received, Michigan Law Review
Contracts - Moral Obligation As Consideration - Promise To Pay For Benefits Previously Received, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
Plaintiffs, assignees of an oil lease of land, after drilling a dry hole thereon, did not comply with the requirements of their agreement for further development within a stipulated time, in consequence of which there was a formal termination in accordance with the terms of the assignment. An extension of the lease, which the lessees obtained, was assigned to the defendants, who had knowledge of the foregoing circumstances and plaintiffs' claim of a property right in the dry hole. Defendants promised to pay plaintiffs for the use of the dry hole, but subsequently repudiated any liability on the promise. Held …
Nature And Importance Of Legal Possession, Joseph W. Bingham
Nature And Importance Of Legal Possession, Joseph W. Bingham
Michigan Law Review
To impress these unfamiliar facts on our consciousness, so that we shall not lose sight of them during the rest of our discussion, so that we shall not slur them or cloud them by vague use of symbolic ideas or terms concerning property and title, let us repeat the essence of the legal situation. Jackson is the holder of a fee simple acquired tortiously. His title to that fee--i. e. the facts which would induce the courts upon occasion to give him the remedies "vindicating" the existence of this vested fee in him--consist in his actual exclusive use and control …
Nature And Importance Of Legal Possession, Joseph W. Bingham
Nature And Importance Of Legal Possession, Joseph W. Bingham
Michigan Law Review
The careful student of our law of property needs no demonstration of the importance of legal possession. From before the date of the earliest year book the word possession and its synonym seisin have pervaded legal language and have signified matters of great consequence in the decision of cases. "In the history of our law," say Pollock and Maitland, "there is no idea more cardinal than that of seisin. Even in the law of the present day it plays a part which must be studied by every lawyer; but in the past it was so important that we may almost …