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Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Law
Res Judicata -Privies-What Might Have Been Adjudicated Was Adjudicated
Res Judicata -Privies-What Might Have Been Adjudicated Was Adjudicated
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Menace Of Jarndyce And Jarndyce, J. H. Brennan
The Menace Of Jarndyce And Jarndyce, J. H. Brennan
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Legislative Regulations, A Study Of The Ways And Means Of Written Law, George A. Shipman
Legislative Regulations, A Study Of The Ways And Means Of Written Law, George A. Shipman
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Judicial Law Making And Stare Decisis, F. R. Aumann
Judicial Law Making And Stare Decisis, F. R. Aumann
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Meaning Of "Heirs" In Willsa Suggestion In Legal Method, Lewis M. Simes, Lorentz B. Knouff, George E. Leonard Jr.:
The Meaning Of "Heirs" In Willsa Suggestion In Legal Method, Lewis M. Simes, Lorentz B. Knouff, George E. Leonard Jr.:
Michigan Law Review
A major task of the lawyer is the prediction of judicial action. No less than a quarter of a century ago Justice Holmes referred to the law as a body of "systematized prediction." Today legal scholars are not content to base their predictions solely upon the body of rules announced in judicial opinions. By means of elaborate fact studies they have sought to ascertain how rules of law actually function in society. Not only have these studies dealt with problems of procedure and the administration of courts, they have also invaded the fields of commercial and property law. Among such …