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Institutional And Post-Institutional Treatment Of The Sex Offender, Thomas P. Wall Jr., Chalmers P. Wylie Dec 1948

Institutional And Post-Institutional Treatment Of The Sex Offender, Thomas P. Wall Jr., Chalmers P. Wylie

Vanderbilt Law Review

The problem of the sex offender is as old as society itself. Today, as in the distant past, man is more concerned, in the first instance, with protecting himself and his loved ones from the corrupting touch of the so-called "sex- fiend" than he is with the punishment; treatment or cure of such persons. This phenomenon of social psychology still prevails in spite of the growing preachments of the doctor, psychologist, criminologist and more recently, of the lawyer prosecutor, the lawyer law-maker and the lawyer practitioner,' to the effect that the primarily desirable end of protecting society can best be …


Agency To Make Representations, Merton Ferson Dec 1948

Agency To Make Representations, Merton Ferson

Vanderbilt Law Review

Representations, commands, threats and other utterances are a species of acts and may have legal consequences. An utterance may, for example, constitute fraud, negligence, slander or intimidation. The person who speaks is responsible and it may be that another person, in whose behalf the utterance was made, also is responsible. This discussion has to do with the question of what must be shown to establish the ability' of one person to speak in behalf of another, and thus to make the other liable for the legal consequences.


State Constitutional Conventions And State Legislative Power, Walter F. Dodd Dec 1948

State Constitutional Conventions And State Legislative Power, Walter F. Dodd

Vanderbilt Law Review

The State of Tennessee faces a serious problem in that it badly needs changes in its Constitution of 1870 and finds it substantially impossible to make such changes by means of proposed amendments by the two houses of its General Assembly. The requirements (1) that legislative proposal be by a majority of all members of the two houses and that it be agreed to by two thirds of the General Assembly then next chosen, and (2) that approval of a proposed amendment be "by a majority of all the citizens of the State, voting for Representatives," ' substantially defeat possibility …


Institutional And Post-Institutional Treatment Of The Sex Offender, Thomas P. Wall Jr., Chalmers P. Wylie Dec 1948

Institutional And Post-Institutional Treatment Of The Sex Offender, Thomas P. Wall Jr., Chalmers P. Wylie

Vanderbilt Law Review

The problem of the sex offender is as old as society itself. Today, as in the distant past, man is more concerned, in the first instance, with protecting himself and his loved ones from the corrupting touch of the so-called "sex-fiend" than he is with the punishment, treatment or cure of such persons. This phenomenon of social psychology still prevails in spite of the growing preachments of the doctor, psychologist, criminologist and more recently, of the lawyer prosecutor, the lawyer law-maker and the lawyer practitioner,' to the effect that the primarily desirable end of protecting society can best be achieved …


Editorial Board, Journal Staff Dec 1948

Editorial Board, Journal Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

No abstract provided.


Rescission By Third Party Prior To Principal's Ratification Of Agent's Unauthorized Action, Theodore G. Pappas Dec 1948

Rescission By Third Party Prior To Principal's Ratification Of Agent's Unauthorized Action, Theodore G. Pappas

Vanderbilt Law Review

Ratification' by an alleged principal of acts that another person has assumed to do in his behalf without prior authorization gives rise to two general questions. First, can the person who ratifies be held liable for or be bound by the acts he has ratified? Second, can the person who ratifies bind the person that his assumed agent has presumed to bargain with if this person attempts to withdraw before the alleged principal ratifies? Each question presents conditions and refinements.

The present discussion will be confined to the second of the above questions-viz., Can the third party recede from the …


Book Reviews, William N. Ethridge, Jr. (Reviewer), M. G. Dakin (Reviewer), A. B. Neil (Reviewer), C. M. Updegraff (Reviewer) Dec 1948

Book Reviews, William N. Ethridge, Jr. (Reviewer), M. G. Dakin (Reviewer), A. B. Neil (Reviewer), C. M. Updegraff (Reviewer)

Vanderbilt Law Review

Book Reviews

The Roosevelt Court: A Study in Judicial Politics and Values By C.Herman Pritchett New York: The Macmillan Company, 1948, Pp. 314,$5.00

Lions Under the Throne By Charles P. Curtis, Jr. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin Company, 1947. Pp. 361. $3.50

The Nine Young Men By Wesley McCune New York: Harper & Bros.,1947. Pp. 293. $3.50

reviewer: William N. Ethridge, Jr.

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A Declaration of Legal Faith By Wiley Rutledge Lawrence, Kansas:University of Kansas Press, 1947. Pp. 82. $2.00

reviewer: M. G. Dakin

The Papers of Walter Clark: 1857-1901, Vol. 1 Edited by Aubrey Lee Brooks and Hugh T. Leffler Chapel …


Recent Cases, Law Review Staff Dec 1948

Recent Cases, Law Review Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

CONFLICT OF LAWS--FULL FAITH AND CREDIT--DOMESTIC SEPARATE MAINTENANCE DECREE SURVIVES FOREIGN DIVORCE

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CONSTITUTIONAL LAW--DUE PROCESS--USE OF PEREMPTORY'CHALLENGE TO EXCLUDE ALL MEMBERS OF ACCUSED'S RACE FROM TRIAL JURY

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CONSTITUTIONAL LAW--FREEDOM OF SPEECH--USE OF AMPLIFICATION DEVICE IN PUBLIC PARK HELD WITHIN CONSTITUTIONAL GUARANTEE

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CONSTITUTIONAL LAW--SEARCHES AND SEIZURES--EVIDENCE OBTAINED WITHOUT SEARCH WARRANT INADMISSIBLE THOUGH SEIZED IN PROCESS OF LAWFUL ARREST

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CONSTITUTIONAL LAW--RACIALLY RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS--JUDICIAL ENFORCEMENT AS STATE ACTION

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CONTRACTS--BROKER'S COMMISSIONS--RIGHT TO RECOVER UNDERDOCTRINE OF SUBSTITUTED PERFORMANCE

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CONTRACTS--COMMERCIAL FRUSTRATION--REQUIREMENT THAT A BASIC PURPOSE OF THE CONTRACT BE FRUSTRATED

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CRIMINAL LAW--CUMULATIVE SENTENCES--EFFECT OF STATE PAROLE UPON COMMENCEMENT OF …


The Cement Decision And Basing-Point Pricing Systems, Clyde L. Ball Dec 1948

The Cement Decision And Basing-Point Pricing Systems, Clyde L. Ball

Vanderbilt Law Review

The period since the end of World War II has been marked by a tremendous volume of litigation arising under the federal anti-trust statutes. One of the Government's principal attacks has been aimed at the basing-point system of pricing which has been employed in many basic industries. This attack marked no new departure on the part of the Government; the Federal Trade Commission has consistently opposed the system, and the courts have repeatedly been called upon to review Commission orders aimed at some feature of the basing-point system.

Until recently the system had successfully withstood these attacks. It had weathered …


Mr. Justice Mcreynolds -- An Appreciation, R. V. Fletcher Dec 1948

Mr. Justice Mcreynolds -- An Appreciation, R. V. Fletcher

Vanderbilt Law Review

In the course of the memorial exercises in honor of Justice McReynolds, held in the Supreme Court of the United States on March 31, 1948, the Attorney General made the significant statement that McReynolds was neither liberal nor conservative." This observation was made in connection with the statement that the Justice, when he was appointed to the Court, was considered a liberal, and when he left the Court, a conservative. His characterization as a liberal was by reason of his experience as a prosecutor in antitrust cases; his reputation for conservatism rests upon his attitude toward legislative measures and economic …


The Liability Of Public Corporations In England And America, Stanley D. Rose Dec 1948

The Liability Of Public Corporations In England And America, Stanley D. Rose

Vanderbilt Law Review

The public corporation is a common device to carry on governmental activities in the British Commonwealth, Europe and the United States.' It has been the uniformly favored instrument of nationalization policies. The reason for the use of such a public body is "unquestionably due to the realization that it offers the most convenient though by no means the only method for a successful application in public enterprise of principles of business efficiency developed in the private field." The necessarily extensive dealings of private citizens with such corporations force the courts to face promptly the problem of the legal status of …


The Cement Decision And Basing-Point Pricing Systems, Clyde L. Ball Dec 1948

The Cement Decision And Basing-Point Pricing Systems, Clyde L. Ball

Vanderbilt Law Review

The period since the end of World War II has been marked by a tremendous volume of litigation arising under the federal anti-trust statutes. One of the Government's principal attacks has been aimed at the basing-point system of pricing which has been employed in many basic industries. This attack marked no new departure on the part of the Government; the Federal Trade Commission has consistently opposed the system, and the courts have repeatedly been called upon to review Commission orders aimed at some feature of the basing-point system.

Until recently the system had successfully withstood these attacks. It had weathered …


Negotiated Vs. Competitive Debt Financing, Ralph S. Peterson Jun 1948

Negotiated Vs. Competitive Debt Financing, Ralph S. Peterson

Vanderbilt Law Review

The principle of competitive bidding for municipal, equipment trust, and terminal issues has been so thoroughly tested during war, boom and depression markets, that its advantages are no longer questioned. It was the extension of this principle, however, to public utility securities generally in 1941, and to additional classes of railroad debt securities in 1944 which again aroused organized opposition from the traditional utility and railroad bankers and gave rise to their solemn predictions of the dire consequences which would follow the adoption of competitive bidding for such securities.

It is not possible within the scope of this article to …


Federal Regulation And State Gambling Laws, Walter H. Moses Jun 1948

Federal Regulation And State Gambling Laws, Walter H. Moses

Vanderbilt Law Review

The statement that the detailed regulation of security exchanges and transactions conducted thereon which is embodied in the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Securities Act of 1933 and the regulations promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission thereunder constitutes an encouragement to gambling in securities, no doubt quite properly places a heavy burden of proof on the person making it. This article has as its purpose a demonstration of the truth of such statement.


Editorial Board, Journal Staff Jun 1948

Editorial Board, Journal Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Significance Of Capital Surplus To The Investor, Charles E. Crouch Jun 1948

The Significance Of Capital Surplus To The Investor, Charles E. Crouch

Vanderbilt Law Review

The examination of the net worth section of a balance sheet reveals two major parts, namely, (1) the capital stock account and (2) the surplus account. The surplus account is the balancing account which equalizes the difference between the assets, liabilities and capitalization. In this manner the surplus account becomes a reservoir into which are poured increases in net worth and out of which are dipped decreases. Although every transaction of a business either directly or indirectly bears upon the surplus account, corporate accountants and directors have not given enough attention to the proper treatment and handling of this important …


The International Bank For Reconstruction And Development--A New Departure In International Finance, Robert L. Garner Jun 1948

The International Bank For Reconstruction And Development--A New Departure In International Finance, Robert L. Garner

Vanderbilt Law Review

Early in World War II, financial and economic experts of the Allied Nations concluded that if economic health was to return with the peace, the family of nations would have to forego the bad economic manners which had become commonplace between the wars. The conviction that a new and better economic household for the world had to be planned resulted in the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, in July, 1944, in which representatives of 44 nations participated.

The Conference met to solve two major problems. The first of these grew out of the chaotic …


American Business And Risk Capital, Emil Schram Jun 1948

American Business And Risk Capital, Emil Schram

Vanderbilt Law Review

In the midst of a nation-wide business surge--in building, in steel, in automobiles and petroleum production and farming--our capital markets stand alone as the one "depressed area" in the national economy.

It is due to the failure of many of those who call the tune on our country's fiscal and credit policies to realize that they are sluicing off the top soil from a resource as definite and tangible as our farms; they are eroding something as measurable as our grazing lands; they are pumping off onto barren ground something as exhaustible as our oil wells.

I am speaking of …


The Sec And The Broker-Dealer, Louis Loss Jun 1948

The Sec And The Broker-Dealer, Louis Loss

Vanderbilt Law Review

A couple of weeks ago the Commission handed down an opinion in a broker-dealer revocation proceeding which is the latest in a series of cases over the past few years that have gradually blocked out the duties of a broker-dealer to his customer. That case gives me my theme today.

It happens that most of what I am about to say relates primarily to the over-the-counter market. I was a little disturbed about the propriety of talking about over-the-counter problems under the auspices of this organization. However, we are all interested, I take it, in the problems of the securities …


Some Current Thoughts On Corporate Capitalization, Chester Rohrlich Jun 1948

Some Current Thoughts On Corporate Capitalization, Chester Rohrlich

Vanderbilt Law Review

There is nothing new in the basic legal problems connected with the need of each new business to somehow or other raise the necessary funds with which to launch the enterprise. It is primarily because of the flexibility which the corporate form of doing business affords in pooling together for a common business purpose the funds of many persons with diverse financial needs and objectives, that the corporation has achieved the preeminent position which it occupies. But while the fundamental questions are old, new times, new decisions and new statutes serve to emphasize different phases and different facets of the …


Over-The-Counter Securities Markets, Guy L. Clinton Jun 1948

Over-The-Counter Securities Markets, Guy L. Clinton

Vanderbilt Law Review

Following the 1929 collapse, much attention has been centered on the role of the security exchanges in our economy. Whether or not improper operation of the securities markets had caused the instability of the national economy was not clearly apparent. However, as many persons believed that such was the case, or that such operation was at least a major factor in the economic ills of the country, the "crash" and the resulting investigations provided the impetus for a reform program in the investment banking segment of our economy, and one phase of this program dealt with securities.


To What Extent Does The Privilege Against Self-Incrimination Protect A Witness Against Forced Production Of Documents, Herschiel S. Barnes, Charles K. Cosner Jun 1948

To What Extent Does The Privilege Against Self-Incrimination Protect A Witness Against Forced Production Of Documents, Herschiel S. Barnes, Charles K. Cosner

Vanderbilt Law Review

This comment is intended to be a companion piece to the Comment in Vanderbilt Law Review, Vol. I, No. 2, which discusses self-incrimination by means of physical disclosures. The preceding Comment gave a brief account of the privilege and pointed out that the Constitutions of the Federal Government and forty-six states have incorporated the common law privilege against self-incrimination. The two exceptions among the states, Iowa and New Jersey, have accepted the privilege, either by incorporation into their common law by judicial interpretation, or by statute. It is the purpose of this comment to discuss the possibility of the invocation …


Proposed Changes In The Presidential Election System, Estes Kefauver Apr 1948

Proposed Changes In The Presidential Election System, Estes Kefauver

Vanderbilt Law Review

A strong and real two-party system is the most intelligent, responsive and lasting way to operate a democracy. The party in power formulates the policy and program of the Government. The minority party criticizes and tries to improve that program. The present system of electing a president prevents the candidates of the political parties from being truly expressive of the members of the parties. It also results in the, heads of the parties taking positions which are out of harmony with a large segment of the party.


Constitutionality Of The Proposed Regional Plan For Professional Education Of The Southern Negro, Clyde L. Ball Apr 1948

Constitutionality Of The Proposed Regional Plan For Professional Education Of The Southern Negro, Clyde L. Ball

Vanderbilt Law Review

It is the purpose of this comment to consider the constitutional questions involved in current plans for establishing in the South regional schools where Negroes may obtain a professional education. Politically and socially the problem of Negro education is dynamic and dynamitic, and no attempt will be made here to discuss or argue the points involved from a sociological point of view. Rather the purpose here is to consider the question from its narrow legal aspect; social considerations will be noticed only insofar as may be necessary to the discussion of the legal problems.


The Employment Security Program (With Special Reference To Tennessee Unemployment Insurance), E.J. Eberling Apr 1948

The Employment Security Program (With Special Reference To Tennessee Unemployment Insurance), E.J. Eberling

Vanderbilt Law Review

Employment security was one of the major programs for which provision was made in the Social Security Act of 1935. Under its terms a tax program was instituted which encouraged the states to enact unemployment insurance laws and expand their employment services. The Act imposed a federal tax on the payrolls of subject employers against which such employers were permitted to offset the major part of the taxes which they paid under state unemployment insurance laws. Since employers in states which did not enact appropriate insurance laws were liable for the full federal tax, the states acted speedily to set …


An Examination Of The Tennessee Law Of Administrative Procedure, George Street Boone Apr 1948

An Examination Of The Tennessee Law Of Administrative Procedure, George Street Boone

Vanderbilt Law Review

The problem of judicial review, which has been considered in some de-tail, seems a fertile field for reform. Without intending to deprecate the ability and conscientiousness of the judiciary of the state, the continued dominance of administrative procedure by this group will effectively prevent the development of an efficient body of administrative servants to discharge the ever increasing functions which are being delegated to them.

Cooperation and mutual respect between the judge and the administrator are the foundation stones upon which any satisfactory system must be con-structed. This requires considerable legislation and an awareness on the part of the judge …


Tennessee Judicial Highlights, Journal Staff Apr 1948

Tennessee Judicial Highlights, Journal Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

CASES OF CURRENT INTEREST AND IMPORTANCE PREVIOUSLY NOTED

Baker v. State, 184 Tenn. 503 (1947), 1 Vand. L. Rev. 127 (1947). Accessory after the fact--when is felony complete?

Black v. Black, 202 S. W. 2d 659 (Tenn. 1947), 20 Tenn. L. Rev. 201 (1948).' Effect of reciting an oral contract to sell land in an undelivered deed.

Churn v. State, 184 Tenn. 646 (1947), 20 Tenn. L. Rev. 195 (1948). Testimony of arresting officers.

Davis v. Beeler, 207 S. W. 2d 343 (Tenn. 1947), 1 Vand. L. Rev. 451 (1948). Prohibition of practice of naturopathy in Tennessee.

Elliott v. Fuqua, …


The Tennessee Retailers' Sales Tax Act, Stanely D. Rose Apr 1948

The Tennessee Retailers' Sales Tax Act, Stanely D. Rose

Vanderbilt Law Review

The primary consideration in the adoption of a tax by a state is the constitutional framework into which it is to be fitted. Probable litigation is a factor of importance in the choice of a tax. If there are no complicating factors, a simple tax on sales seems to be one of the forms of excise tax most easily sustainable under the Tennessee Constitution. Indeed, Tennessee at an early date had a sales tax which apparently met with court approval.

The most inclusive authority upon which to base an excise tax in Tennessee is the clause which states that "the …


Cases Noted, Journal Staff Apr 1948

Cases Noted, Journal Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

bankruptcy--unclaimed dividends--distribution to creditors who have not been paid in full

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constitutional law--prohibition of practice of naturopathy as a separate branch of the healing arts

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constitutional law--unAmerican activities committee held valid exercise of congressional power

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criminal law--evidence--admission of confession


Constitutionality Of Additional Assessments Necessitated By The Delinquency Of Some Land Owners In A Special Assessment District, Thomas A. Thomas Apr 1948

Constitutionality Of Additional Assessments Necessitated By The Delinquency Of Some Land Owners In A Special Assessment District, Thomas A. Thomas

Vanderbilt Law Review

Most states have constitutional provisions requiring expressly or in effect, equality and uniformity of taxation. Under these constitutional requirements, it is usually held that the legislatures acting under their general taxing power, are not prohibited from making geographical classifications for purposes of taxation so long as they are reasonable and based upon a substantial distinction. However, the equality and uniformity provisions do require that all members of the same class be taxed alike. This limitation does not require meticulous adjustments to avoid incidental hardships upon some member of the same class, but requires only substantial uniformity. Since special assessments are …