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Full-Text Articles in Law

Replevin Of The Contents Of Safe Deposit Boxes, Beverly Douglas Jr. Jun 1949

Replevin Of The Contents Of Safe Deposit Boxes, Beverly Douglas Jr.

Vanderbilt Law Review

It is often stated that a plaintiff cannot recover in replevin' or detinue unless the defendant is in possession of the disputed goods at the commence- ment of the action. This requirement is fundamentally one of practicality. Since possession of the chattel is the primary object of an action for specific recovery, replevin is inappropriate unless the defendant is in a position to restore this possession to the plaintiff. But one may sometimes be able to put another in possession and have a duty to do so without himself having that combination of physical control and intent which the law …


John Howard Moore, Robert W. Sturdivant Jun 1949

John Howard Moore, Robert W. Sturdivant

Vanderbilt Law Review

This issue of the Vanderbilt Law Review is dedicated to Mr. John Howard Moore. At the end of this current school year Mr. Moore will have served a quarter of a century as a Professor of Law at the Vanderbilt University School of Law and will retire from active teaching.

Mr. Moore has been and remains an idealist and perfectionist in the law. This has been the theme of his teaching. We that had him as a teacher know that it is his belief that neither he nor anyone else is qualified to answer a nice legal question until the …


Replevin Of The Contents Of Safe Deposit Boxes, Beverly Douglas Jr. Jun 1949

Replevin Of The Contents Of Safe Deposit Boxes, Beverly Douglas Jr.

Vanderbilt Law Review

It is often stated that a plaintiff cannot recover in replevin' or detinue unless the defendant is in possession of the disputed goods at the commencement of the action. This requirement is fundamentally one of practicality. Since possession of the chattel is the primary object of an action for specific recovery, replevin is inappropriate unless the defendant is in a position to restore this possession to the plaintiff. But one may sometimes be able to put another in possession and have a duty to do so without himself having that combination of physical control and intent which the law calls …


Part Performance And Equitable, Estoppel In Tennessee, Cecil D. Branstetter Apr 1949

Part Performance And Equitable, Estoppel In Tennessee, Cecil D. Branstetter

Vanderbilt Law Review

The Tennessee chancery courts have repeatedly been petitioned for the specific enforcement of parol contracts for the sale of land, on the basis of part performance.' The Tennessee Supreme Court has consistently refused to give such relief, emphatically laying down the rule that part performance of a parol contract for the sale of land does not serve as a substitute for the writing required by the Statute of Frauds...

The purpose of this note is to determine the extent to which Tennessee courts will recognize and enforce parol contracts for the sale of an interest inland when the petitioner relies …


Book Reviews, Harold Shepherd, Rollin M. Perkins, Stanley D. Rose Apr 1949

Book Reviews, Harold Shepherd, Rollin M. Perkins, Stanley D. Rose

Vanderbilt Law Review

The Rational Basis of Contracts and Related Problems in Legal Analysis By Merton L. Ferson Brooklyn: The Foundation Press, Inc.,1949. Pp. i-ix, 1-330. $4.00

reviewer: Harold Shepherd

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Beutel's Brannan, Negotiable Instruments Law By Frederick K.Beutel Cincinnati: The W. H. Anderson Company Seventh Edition,1948. Pp. xiii, 1628. $15.00

reviewer: Rollin M. Perkins

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Social Meaning of Legal Concepts--No. 1, Inheritance of Property and the Power of Testamentary Disposition Edited by Edward N. Cahn New York: New York University School of Law, 1948.Pp. vi, 90. $1.50

reviewer: Stanley D. Rose


Options And Valuation Of Property For Federal Tax Purposes, William J. Bowe Apr 1949

Options And Valuation Of Property For Federal Tax Purposes, William J. Bowe

Vanderbilt Law Review

In Estate of John Q. Strange, there was an agreement between two brothers, engaged in business in a close corporation, which provided that upon the death of either, the survivor might acquire the stock of the other upon payment of $10,000 to his estate. Payment was so made following the decedent's death. The fair market value of the stock on the date of death was stipulated to be $238,126.54. The Board of Tax Appeals held that the option price of $10,000 was the proper amount to be included in the decedent's gross estate as the value of his stock.

In …


A Symposium On Estate Planning: Foreword, Mayo Adams Shattuck Feb 1949

A Symposium On Estate Planning: Foreword, Mayo Adams Shattuck

Vanderbilt Law Review

The power and increasing value of conferences and symposia of the sort which the Vanderbilt Law Review has arranged is that a team of first class men are gathered together to give testimony and useful advice upon the various independent factors which must be taken into account in solution of this fascinating problem. When a group of distinguished scholars and practitioners like those participating in this symposium are willing to make thoughtful contributions to this sort-of round table, without hope of compensation except for the satisfaction that comes from the provision of sound ideas and the education that stems from …


Foreword, Mayo A. Shattuck Feb 1949

Foreword, Mayo A. Shattuck

Vanderbilt Law Review

In order to get a proper measure of modern Estate Planning I think it may be useful to consider, very briefly, some aspects of its history. The family trust was born into our jurisprudence in an environment which had been moulded in that solid and immovable pyramid called feudalism. In that social order there was nothing of imaginative elasticity. Lateral allegiances or entanglements were as little known as lateral movements. All lines of authority moved from the top; all discharges of duties were rendered vertically to the liege lord next above. As with human relationships so also with property. The …


A Planner's Primer, William M. Reynolds Feb 1949

A Planner's Primer, William M. Reynolds

Vanderbilt Law Review

Anyone undertaking an assignment to write within a few pages under this comprehensive title must limit his coverage. This general article on a subject as intangible as estate planning omits entirely or gives short treatment to many considerations which may be of great importance to the conscientious planning of relatively complicated estate situations. Emphasis will be placed on the tax aspects of estate planning, particularly federal taxes, but consideration will be given to other aspects which may be of equal or even greater importance. This deliberate emphasis is certainly not intended to add to the misleading impression, too frequently held, …


Valuation Of The Family Controlled Business For Estate Tax Purposes, James O. Wynn Feb 1949

Valuation Of The Family Controlled Business For Estate Tax Purposes, James O. Wynn

Vanderbilt Law Review

The starting point in the determination of the federal estate tax is the valuation of the property included in the gross estate.' While the Internal Revenue Code does not use the term "fair market value" in defining the gross estate, the regulations promulgated by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue as an interpretation of the estate tax provisions of the Code provide that "the value of every item of property includible in the gross estate is the fair market value thereof." While a creditable argument could be made that Congress, in using the term "value" in defining the gross estate, intended …


Tennessee Death Taxes, Charles K. Cosner Feb 1949

Tennessee Death Taxes, Charles K. Cosner

Vanderbilt Law Review

The leading articles in this symposium stress the problems which federal death duties create in the planning of estates. The purpose of this note is to discuss the Tennessee Inheritance Tax,' and to indicate how its treatment of particular types of property and forms of ownership differs from the federal succession tax.

The federal tax poses no problem to the Tennessean of moderate means in planning his estate. By some elementary advance planning, all but very substantial estates may be made free of federal tax. In no event will an estate be subject to federal tax which is valued at …


Some Aspects Of Estate Planning In Tennessee, Alec B. Stevenson Feb 1949

Some Aspects Of Estate Planning In Tennessee, Alec B. Stevenson

Vanderbilt Law Review

Not many years ago a large New York bank circulated privately booklet with the provocative title "The Passing of the Simple Will." The choice of the title and the text itself underlined the complexities which surround the owner of property and his advisers when they jointly attempt to plan the disposition of a modern estate for modem needs. The now almost legendary owner of Blackacre could, indeed, write a simple will, quite effective and satisfactory as a plan for the disposition 'and use of the family property. One need scarcely recite the changes which have taken place in more recent …