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The Restatement Of Torts And The Courts, Jack B. Weinstein
The Restatement Of Torts And The Courts, Jack B. Weinstein
Vanderbilt Law Review
Primarily through tort law the courts compensate those injured by others. Secondary aspects of our work such as deterrence or forcing tortfeasors to pay the full social costs of their activities are minor and collateral. For jurors focusing on compensation, tort law has only two operative elements: damage and cause. It is the law professor and the judge, through decisions on motions and instructions, who are the main Restatement consumers. Emphasizing mass torts, I will make three points relevant to those considering the health of tort law.
First: Tort law in its least inhibitory principle is useful be- cause of …
Book Reviews, Edmund M. Morgan (Reviewer), Albert Williams (Reviewer), J. Warren Madden (Reviewer), Melvin M. Belli (Reviewer), George H. Tyne (Reviewer), William J. Bowe (Reviewer)
Book Reviews, Edmund M. Morgan (Reviewer), Albert Williams (Reviewer), J. Warren Madden (Reviewer), Melvin M. Belli (Reviewer), George H. Tyne (Reviewer), William J. Bowe (Reviewer)
Vanderbilt Law Review
Book Reviews
The Hearsay Rule
By R. W. Baker
London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons,Ltd., 1950. Pp. xxi, 180
reviewer: Edmund M. Morgan
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Self-Incrimination: What Can an Accused Person be Compelled to Do?
By Fred E. Inbau
Springfield, Illinois: Charles C. Thomas, 1950.Pp. x, 91. $2.50
reviewer: Albert Williams
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Administrative Law
By Kenneth C. Davis
St. Paul: West Pub. Co.,1951. Pp. xvi, 1024. $8.00
Administrative Law: A Test
By Reginald Parker
Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1952. Pp. x, 344. $5.50
Administrative Agencies and the Courts
By Frank E. Cooper
Ann Arbor; University of Michigan Law School, 1951. Pp. …