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Vanderbilt Law Review

Constitutional Law

Eminent domain

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Full-Text Articles in Law

Constitutional Limitations On Governmental Participation In Downtown Development Projects, David M. Lawrence Mar 1982

Constitutional Limitations On Governmental Participation In Downtown Development Projects, David M. Lawrence

Vanderbilt Law Review

The purpose of this Article is to investigate the constitutional boundaries that surround the most common forms of governmental participation. Part II of the Article discusses the constitutional limitations on property transactions in which the government either uses its power of eminent domain to condemn land for private downtown development, acquires land for the same purpose through a voluntary sale by the owner of the land, or subsidizes private development by its method of conveying property to the developer. Part III of the Article then discusses the problems that arise when a downtown project includes both public and private facilities, …


Recent Cases, Law Review Staff Mar 1968

Recent Cases, Law Review Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

Conflict of Laws--Torts--Law of Jurisdiction with Predominant Interest in Resolution of Issue Applied

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Constitutional Law--Owner of Private Subdivision May Refuse To Sell to Negroes

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Eminent Domain--Compensation for Substantial Impairment of Riparian Owners' Right of Access Denied

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Taxation--Professional Service Corporations--Kintner Regulations Held Invalid

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Taxation--Recovered Charitable Contributions, Previously Claimed as Deductions, Are Gross Income In Year of Receipt


Constitutional Law--1960 Tennessee Survey, James C. Kirby Jr. Oct 1960

Constitutional Law--1960 Tennessee Survey, James C. Kirby Jr.

Vanderbilt Law Review

Eminent Domain--Just Compensation.-Landowners sued the Tennessee Commissioner of Highways and Public Works for compensation for a taking of property for the state's superhighway program in Brooksbank v. Leech. The trial court sustained a demurrer on the ground that the suit was barred by sovereign immunity. In order to dispose of this question on appeal the supreme court first determined whether the legislature had provided an adequate statutory method for just compensation, the absence of which would have rendered the taking unconstitutional under both article I, section 21, of the Constitution of Tennessee and the due process clause of the United …


Recent Constitutional Developments On Eminent Domain, John L. Bowers Jr., J. L. Boren Jr. Apr 1951

Recent Constitutional Developments On Eminent Domain, John L. Bowers Jr., J. L. Boren Jr.

Vanderbilt Law Review

Although the provisions of both state and federal law that cruel and unusual punishments shill not be imposed are considered popularly to relate only to those punishments which exist solely in the books, the provisions are not useless today. Recent cases have shown a tendency to expand the scope of the prohibition, especially with regard to excessive punishment, and to incorporate the proscription within the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. As respect, that which likely will be deemed cruel and unusual, little can be done beyond noting those situations in which the limitation has been applied. If a generalization …