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1991

Liability

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Articles 1 - 18 of 18

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Economic Efficiency Of The Robust Rules Of Modern Product Liability Law, Ronald Sisselman, David R. Wade Nov 1991

The Economic Efficiency Of The Robust Rules Of Modern Product Liability Law, Ronald Sisselman, David R. Wade

Northern Illinois University Law Review

Since the 1960's, courts have embraced rules imposing "strict liability" on manufacturers for defective products while eschewing traditional negligence rules. This shift has generated considerable scholarship. Much of this scholarship has utilized economic models to analyze legal rules in terms of their economic efficiency. This article, by partitioning the "accident event space," derives and focuses on an alternative set of economically efficient "robust rules" to the inappropriate and narrow "simple rules" derived by previous scholars. Through an examination of existing case law, this article demonstrates that these economically efficient "robust rules" more accurately explain courts' notion of strict liability and …


Economic Theories Of Legal Liability, Robert D. Cooter May 1991

Economic Theories Of Legal Liability, Robert D. Cooter

Robert Cooter

No abstract provided.


Market-Share Liability After Hymowitz And Conley: Exploring The Limits Of Judicial Power, Christopher J. Mcguire May 1991

Market-Share Liability After Hymowitz And Conley: Exploring The Limits Of Judicial Power, Christopher J. Mcguire

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

This Note surveys the development of market-share liability and examines the limits on the power of state and federal courts to impose liability on defendants through market-share liability. Part I examines briefly the development of market-share liability in the early 1980s. It then explores how the New York Court of Appeals extended market-share liability in Hymowitz v. Eli Lilly and explores this case's ramifications. Part I also draws on a recent Florida case, Conley v. Boyle Drug Co., for further insight into the problems surrounding market-share liability litigation. Part II argues that jurisdictional limitations, such as standing to sue …


Practice Guidelines As Legal Standards Governing Physician Liability, Clark C. Havighurst Apr 1991

Practice Guidelines As Legal Standards Governing Physician Liability, Clark C. Havighurst

Law and Contemporary Problems

The utility of medical practice guidelines in the law of medical malpractice was studied. Contrary to the views of most physicians and policy makers, practice guidelines should be allowed to evolve in a pluralistic fashion.


Oil Pollution Act Of 1990: Opening A New Era In Federal And Texas Regulation Of Oil Spill Prevention, Containment And Cleanup, And Liability, J.B. Ruhl, Michael J. Jewell Apr 1991

Oil Pollution Act Of 1990: Opening A New Era In Federal And Texas Regulation Of Oil Spill Prevention, Containment And Cleanup, And Liability, J.B. Ruhl, Michael J. Jewell

Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications

This article assesses Congress' effort, through enactment of OPA, to meet the goals it stated in 1989. Part II provides an overview of the fragmented" condition of pre-OPA federal law addressing oil spills and an examination of the deficiencies Congress believed existed in that body of law. An understanding of those perceived deficiencies is essential for interpreting OPA. Part III surveys the basic features of OPA, particularly its liability provisions. It concludes that, although OPA surely achieves a major overhaul of federal oil spill law, it is basically in the same boat. Part IV examines the response of the states …


Easment Holder Liability Under Cercla: The Right Way To Deal With Rights-Of-Way, Jill D. Neiman Mar 1991

Easment Holder Liability Under Cercla: The Right Way To Deal With Rights-Of-Way, Jill D. Neiman

Michigan Law Review

Responding to growing public concern about the accumulation of toxic wastes, Congress in 1980 passed the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA). CERCLA authorizes federal action to clean up, or to require others to clean up, leaking hazardous waste sites. Congress placed the financial burden for this cleanup on those responsible for the problem and on those who benefited from improper methods of hazardous waste disposal. Through this liability scheme, Congress also intended CERCLA to encourage responsible or benefited parties to respond voluntarily to the hazardous waste problem.

Part I asserts that CERCLA's legislative history, when read against …


Personal Liability Of The Military Official, Byard Q. Clemmons Mar 1991

Personal Liability Of The Military Official, Byard Q. Clemmons

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Foreword: Law And The Library, Timothy L. Coggins Jan 1991

Foreword: Law And The Library, Timothy L. Coggins

Law Faculty Publications

A Foreword for the North Carolina Libaries Journal on "Law and the Library."


Actual Vs. Apparent Influence: Towards A Standard For Lenders' Cercla Liability, Walter Effross Jan 1991

Actual Vs. Apparent Influence: Towards A Standard For Lenders' Cercla Liability, Walter Effross

Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals

No abstract provided.


Building On Macnamara V. Korean Air Lines, Steven M. Tapper Jan 1991

Building On Macnamara V. Korean Air Lines, Steven M. Tapper

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

This Note explores the possibility of applying Title VII's disparate impact liability theory against foreign companies operating under Treaties of Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation (FCN Treaties). The author questions the reasoning of MacNamara v. Korean Air Lines, which applied disparate treatment, but not disparate impact, against a Korean company operating under an FCN Treaty. According to MacNamara, if courts permit plaintiffs in Title VII-FCN Treaty cases to utilize the disparate impact theory and cite statistical disparities in the racial composition of the work force as evidence of discrimination, employers could be held liable merely for exercising their FCN Treaty rights. …


Case Digest, Law Review Staff Jan 1991

Case Digest, Law Review Staff

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

This Case Digest provides brief analyses of cases that represent current aspects of transnational law. The Digest includes cases that establish legal principles and cases that apply established legal principles to new factual situations. These cases are grouped in topical categories and references are given for further research.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

I. ALIENS: CITIZENSHIP AND NATURALIZATION ......... 857

II. TAXATION AND FOREIGN COMMERCE .................. 862

III. AIR CARRIER LIABILITY--WARSAW CONVENTION ........ 865


The Need For Revisiting The Imposition Of Bad Faith Liability: Industrial Indemnity Co. V. Kallevig, J. Benson Porter, Jr. Jan 1991

The Need For Revisiting The Imposition Of Bad Faith Liability: Industrial Indemnity Co. V. Kallevig, J. Benson Porter, Jr.

Seattle University Law Review

This Note posits two recommendations. First, in order to harmonize the bad faith standards applied in Kallevig and Gingrich, the Kallevig reasonable justification standard should be applied in situations involving questions similar to those confronted by the Gingrich court. Second, this Note contends that the Kallevig court's analysis imposing liability under the CPA was defective because it failed to take proper account of the frequency requirement within the unfair trade practices regulations. By ignoring the frequency provision, the Kallevig decision allows inconsistent treatment of similar factual situations depending on whether the decision is being made by an agency or …


Section 1983, Honorable George C. Pratt, Martin A. Schwartz, Leon Friedman Jan 1991

Section 1983, Honorable George C. Pratt, Martin A. Schwartz, Leon Friedman

Touro Law Review

No abstract provided.


Liability For Construction Defects In Residential Realty: A Re-Examination In Light Of Kennedy V. Columbia Lumber & Manufacturing Co., Richard C. Webb Jan 1991

Liability For Construction Defects In Residential Realty: A Re-Examination In Light Of Kennedy V. Columbia Lumber & Manufacturing Co., Richard C. Webb

South Carolina Law Review

No abstract provided.


Fairness Opinions And Negligent Misrepresentation: Defining Investment Bankers' Duty To Third-Party Shareholders, Michael W. Martin Jan 1991

Fairness Opinions And Negligent Misrepresentation: Defining Investment Bankers' Duty To Third-Party Shareholders, Michael W. Martin

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Plight Of The Passive Past Owner: Defining The Limits Of Superfund Liability, J.B. Ruhl Jan 1991

The Plight Of The Passive Past Owner: Defining The Limits Of Superfund Liability, J.B. Ruhl

Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications

These days, if you want to stir up high emotions in Congress, statehouses, corporate boardrooms or citizen group meetings, mention the word Superfund. That alias for the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA) evokes strong reactions from industry, environmentalists, bankers, politicians, and just about everyone else. CERCLA, a relative latecomer to the present-day body of federal environmental law, was enacted in 1980 to fill a gap in then existing law by creating the authority and liability for cleanup of abandoned facilities contaminated with hazardous substances. In the short time it has been with us, CERCLA has …


Book Review, Richard Gruner Jan 1991

Book Review, Richard Gruner

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

Large corporations are important, yet enigmatic, participants in world commerce. International corporate behavior is morally and legally significant because of its immense scope and societal impact. That behavior, however, is often so complex as to defy characterization under the simple moral or legal standards applicable to individuals. Furthermore, the ability of traditional moral or legal systems to shape multinational corporate conduct is also unclear given that large corporate bureaucracies lack the motivations and fears normally used to enforce moral or legal accountability. As one frustrated court noted, the problem is that corporations have "no soul to damn, and no body …


Note: The Personal Liability Of Directors In Florida: Whose Corporation Is It Anyway?*, Riah Ramlogan Seuradge Jan 1991

Note: The Personal Liability Of Directors In Florida: Whose Corporation Is It Anyway?*, Riah Ramlogan Seuradge

Nova Law Review

During the 1980's a serious crisis developed in the insurance industry

which threatened to expose corporate directors to personal liability