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Recent Cases, Law Review Staff
Recent Cases, Law Review Staff
Vanderbilt Law Review
Recent Cases
Agency--Liability of Master for Servant's Acts--State Permit to Operate
Agency--Possession as Indicia of Ownership
Constitutional Law--Aliens--Detention Where Deportations is Impossible
Courts--Contempt--Delay in Summary Punishment
Criminal Law--Habitual Criminal Statutes--Meaning of Previous Conviction Requirement
Domestic Relations--Liability of Husband for Necessaries of Wife Rightfully Living Apart
Income Taxation--Excludibility from Gross Income of Payment over Ceiling Price
Income Taxation--Taxable Income--Claim of Right
Procedure--Grand Jury--Motion to Expunge Defamatory Remarks in Report
Procedure--Statute of Limitations--Retroactive Operation
Statutes--Holding of Unconstitutionality Overruled--Necessity for Re-Enactment
Wills--Contest--Interest of Legatee's Representative
Delinquent Parents And The Criminal Law, Frederick J. Ludwig
Delinquent Parents And The Criminal Law, Frederick J. Ludwig
Vanderbilt Law Review
"There are no delinquent children; there are only delinquent parents." This tautological truism has long been the speaker's mainstay at Rotary luncheons, parent-teacher meetings, and assorted roundtables and institutes on juvenile delinquency. When a New York Children's Court judge undertook to put the principle into practice five years ago, a storm of controversy was unleashed which has not yet subsided. The case, tragic enough, involved 14-year-old Frankie, who scored hits on three passers-by with a stolen gun. The boy, who had been sleeping in hallways and on buses, was committed as a juvenile delinquent to a state training school. His …
Recent Cases, Law Review Staff
Recent Cases, Law Review Staff
Vanderbilt Law Review
Recent Cases
Adverse Possession--Statutes--May One Acquire an Indefeasible Life Estate under Tennessee Code Section 8582
Constitutional Law--Freedom of the Press--Effect of City Ordinance Prohibiting Solicitation of Magazine Subscriptions without Prior Consent of Person Solicited
Constitutional Law--Statutes--Requirement of Loyalty Oath as Valid Exercise of Police Power
Contracts--Procurement of Government Contracts on Contingent Fee Basis--Effect of Executive Order
Criminal Law--Mens Rea--Requirement in Action for Converting Government Property--Necessity for Criminal Intent
Damages--Injury to Child--Expenses of Parent in Attending Child
Divorce--Determination of Place Where Abandonment Occurs--Effect of Residence Requirement for Bringing Action
Domestic Relations--Legitimation Statute--Interpretation and Effect
Evidence--Unreasonable Searches and Seizures--Admissibility of Evidence Obtained …
Some Developments In The Law Concerning Confessions, William Wicker
Some Developments In The Law Concerning Confessions, William Wicker
Vanderbilt Law Review
Our system of administering criminal laws is predicated upon accusatorial rather than inquisitorial proceedings. To maintain inviolate the safeguards consonant with this principle, we have placed upon the State an ever-increasing burden in proving the commission of the crime charged. That this burden has begun to weigh heavily, and perhaps onerously, becomes unmistakably evident from a study of recent developments in the law of confessions.
Books Received, Law Review Staff
Books Received, Law Review Staff
Vanderbilt Law Review
CHARLES EVANS HUGHES AND THE SUPREME COURT
By Samuel Hendel
New York: King's Crown Press, 1951. Pp. 337
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DUE PROCESSES OF LAW
By Virginia Wood
Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1951. Pp. 436. $6.00.
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LEGAL AID IN THE UNITED STATES
By Emery A. Brownell
Rochester: The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Co., 1951. Pp. 333. $4.50.
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LEVIATHAN AND NATURAL LAW
By F. Lyman Windolph
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1951. Pp. 147. $2.50.
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OIL AND LAW
Articles reprinted from the Texas Law Review
Austin:Texas Law Review, 1951. Pp. 1736. Bound copies $15.00, unbound copies $12.00.
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