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Full-Text Articles in Law

Creditor's Rights, Paul J. Hartman Aug 1953

Creditor's Rights, Paul J. Hartman

Vanderbilt Law Review

In City Finance Co. v. Perry, the Tennessee Supreme Court was called upon to construe a portion of the new and rather involved Motor Vehicle Title and Registration Law, which was enacted by the 1951 legislature. The Perry case construed the provisions which have to do with the recordation of liens upon the certificate of title as constructive notice thereof. These require owners of motor vehicles to register them in the name of the owner with the Motor Vehicle Division of the Tennessee Department of Safety and to procure from it a certificate of title and a title card. This …


Local Government Law, Clyde L. Ball Aug 1953

Local Government Law, Clyde L. Ball

Vanderbilt Law Review

This summary is limited to cases decided in the Court of Appeals and Supreme Court of Tennessee, reported during the last year, and dealing with some phase of that body of law which embraces' Municipal Corporations, Counties, Officers, Elections and related topics fitting into the general classification of Local Government Law. No attempt has been made to consider Acts of the 1953 General Assembly which may have affected this field, as most of the legislation in this field is local in nature.


Annual Survey Of Tennessee Law, John W. Wade Aug 1953

Annual Survey Of Tennessee Law, John W. Wade

Vanderbilt Law Review

The idea of an annual survey of the law of a particular jurisdiction is not a new one, either in this country or abroad. During a period of at least 25 years an increasing number of publications have undertaken to present such a survey. The task is a delicate one, and performances have been somewhat uneven. A mere digest of appellate opinions or a scissors-and-paste collection of expressed rules of law serves some useful purpose but scarcely justifies separate existence. On the other hand an exhaustive discussion of most of the individual decisions prevents a view of the forest for …


Federal Control Of Conflict Of Laws, Elliott E. Cheatham Apr 1953

Federal Control Of Conflict Of Laws, Elliott E. Cheatham

Vanderbilt Law Review

Under our federal system of government two sets of laws operate within the country, the laws of the constituent states and the laws of the central government. For lawyers there is the ever present question, which of them applies to a case: the law of a state, to be interpreted finally by the courts of the state; or national law--federal law, as it is usually called--of which the Supreme Court of the United States is the final arbiter?

Interstate and international matters, with which conflict of laws deals, involve national as well as state interests. In the United States it …