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Articles 1 - 10 of 10
Full-Text Articles in Civil Procedure
Review Of Observations Upon Civil Procedure In West Virginia, Leo Carlin
Review Of Observations Upon Civil Procedure In West Virginia, Leo Carlin
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Institute's Restatement And The Michigan Law, Herbert F. Goodrich
The Institute's Restatement And The Michigan Law, Herbert F. Goodrich
Michigan Law Review
The task which the American Law Institute has undertaken is to make a statement of the common law, in its various branches. The end in view is not codification; indeed the idea is directly opposed to codification. It is hoped to have, when the work is completed, an accurate statement of existing common law, carefully and systematically made, from which local variations and peculiarities have been ironed out. It is hoped, in other words, to restore both accuracy and continuity to the pattern of the common law fabric as it is woven in our judicial mills.
Chancery Hearings In Open Court, J. H. Brennan
Chancery Hearings In Open Court, J. H. Brennan
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Recent Case Books In Civil Procedure, Charles M. Hepburn
Recent Case Books In Civil Procedure, Charles M. Hepburn
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Elimination Of General Verdicts And Instructions To Juries, Thomas H. S. Curd
Elimination Of General Verdicts And Instructions To Juries, Thomas H. S. Curd
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Uniform Law Procedure In Federal Courts, Conner Hall
Uniform Law Procedure In Federal Courts, Conner Hall
West Virginia Law Review
A great drive is being made for the passage of a bill for investing the Supreme Court with power to prescribe rules of procedure for law actions in the Federal Courts. A committee of the American Bar Association, or perhaps rather a small number of a committee, has been active in propaganda work for the proposed legislation. Great names have been invoked, and meetings of the Bar Association and lawyers have been passing resolutions in favor of the bill, but the very unanimity with which some of these resolutions have been passed confirms a natural belief that the action was …
Special Interrogatories To The Jury--Their Nature And Purpose--Court's Discretion Relative To Their Submission, G. D. H.
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Lien Of Judgments Of United States Courts In Washington, F. C. Hackman
Lien Of Judgments Of United States Courts In Washington, F. C. Hackman
Washington Law Review
At common law pecuniary judgments and decrees do not become a lien, in the modern sense of the term, on property of the debtor, so that that effect is a statutory creation. Therefore, whether a judgment is a lien, how made so, to what interest or estate the lien attaches, when the lien commences, how long it endures, and all other particulars must be ascertained from the statutes of the proper jurisdiction. The fixation of the force and effect of judgments and decrees of courts is an attribute of sovereignty. The United States and the several states being sovereignties, each …
The Right To A Jury Trial In West Virginia, L. C.
The Right To A Jury Trial In West Virginia, L. C.
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Service Of Process On Non-Resident Motorists, Thomas Frank Konop
Service Of Process On Non-Resident Motorists, Thomas Frank Konop
Journal Articles
Is it constitutional to remotely serve a defendant process? Traditionally there have been four ways to serve process; personally, constructively, substituted, and the statutorily. Several states have enacted statutes that enable motorist to be served process despite being non-residents of the state. This note explores the constitutionality of service of process for non-resident motorist in light of contemporary decisions handed down from the U.S. Supreme Court and the Supreme courts of the several states.