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Articles 1 - 30 of 1321
Full-Text Articles in Courts
Court Packing Is A Chimera, Brian L. Frye
Court Packing Is A Chimera, Brian L. Frye
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
The dream of the 1930s is alive in Washington. Democrats see
Republicans hemorrhaging voters as Trump struggles with the
economy and the pandemic and are salivating at the prospect of
retaking not only the White House, but also the Senate. Of course, you
should never sell a bearskin until you've caught the bear. But even a
blowout victory can't get Democrats the prize they really want, a
Supreme Court majority. So, in back-to-the-future fashion, many
progressives are pushing the idea of court packing. After all, in politics,
rules are made to be broken.
Eliminating The Criminal Debt Exception For Debtors' Prison, Cortney E. Lollar
Eliminating The Criminal Debt Exception For Debtors' Prison, Cortney E. Lollar
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
Although the exact number is unknown due to poor documentation, the data available suggests nearly a quarter of the current incarcerated population is detained due to a failure to pay their legal financial obligations. In federal courts alone, the amount of criminal legal debt owed to the U.S. government in fiscal year 2017 totaled more than $27 billion, and to third parties, more than $96 billion, not including interest. In 2004, approximately sixty-six percent of all prison inmates were assessed a fine or fee as part of their criminal sentence.4 Not surprisingly, legal financial obligations disproportionately impact poor defendants and …
Neil M. Gorsuch | Associate Justice Of The Supreme Court Of United States, Neil M. Gorsuch
Neil M. Gorsuch | Associate Justice Of The Supreme Court Of United States, Neil M. Gorsuch
The John G. Heyburn II Initiative for Excellence in the Federal Judiciary
The Hon. Neil M. Gorsuch, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, spent Thursday evening on the University of Kentucky campus. He spoke to University of Kentucky College of Law students as well as judges, lawyers and clerks from across Kentucky.
Justice Gorsuch was here as part of the John G. Heyburn II Initiative for Excellence in the Federal Judiciary.
“The Heyburn Initiative enhances the academic experience for our students by providing them with the opportunity to listen to, and engage with, some of our nation’s top leaders in law. The College of Law is one of …
Keeping Up With New Legal Titles, Tina M. Brooks
Keeping Up With New Legal Titles, Tina M. Brooks
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
In this book review, Tina M. Brooks discusses Voters' Verdicts: Citizens, Campaigns, and Institutions in State Supreme Court Elections by Chris W. Bonneau and Damon M. Cann.
Resorting To External Norms And Principles In Constitutional Decision-Making, Alvin L. Goldman
Resorting To External Norms And Principles In Constitutional Decision-Making, Alvin L. Goldman
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
Given the very significant role of constitutional law in the American political system and the fact that Supreme Court Justices are appointed through a political process, it is understandable that the appropriate judicial approach to resolving constitutional issues often is the subject of political commentary. Unfortunately, discourse by politicians concerning this issue seldom rises to the deserved level of wisdom. One of President George W. Bush's public mantras is illustrative of political commentary respecting federal judicial appointments: "I'm going to put strict constructionists on the bench." On its face, and as understood by politically naive audiences, the statement appears to …
The Constitutionality Of An Executive Spending Plan, Paul E. Salamanca
The Constitutionality Of An Executive Spending Plan, Paul E. Salamanca
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
Operation of government in the absence of appropriations has become relatively common in the United States, particularly when projected expenses exceed projected revenue, making adoption of a budget a difficult task for the legislature. This Article focuses on the budget crisis in the Commonwealth of Kentucky from 2002 through 2003. In Part I, this Article recapitulates the history of the spending plan, including the action filed in Franklin Circuit Court to affirm its constitutionality. In Part II, this Article discusses certain theoretical, historical, and legal principles that inform analysis of the plan. In Part III, it considers certain deviations and …
Communis Opinio And The Methods Of Statutory Interpretation: Interpreting Law Or Changing Law, Michael P. Healy
Communis Opinio And The Methods Of Statutory Interpretation: Interpreting Law Or Changing Law, Michael P. Healy
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
Interpretive methodology lies at the core of the Supreme Court's persistent modern debate about statutory interpretation. Supreme Court Justices have applied two fundamentally different methods of interpretation. One is the formalist method, which seeks to promote rule-of-law values and purports to constrain the discretion of judges by limiting them to the autonomous legal text. The second is the nonformalist or antiformalist method, which may consider the legislature's intent or purpose or other evidence as context for understanding the statutory text. The debate within the current Court is commonly framed and advanced by Justices Stevens and Scalia. Justice Scalia is now …
Modifying The Kentucky Rules Of Evidence—A Separation Of Powers Issue, Robert G. Lawson
Modifying The Kentucky Rules Of Evidence—A Separation Of Powers Issue, Robert G. Lawson
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
How do you modify laws that simultaneously exist as statutes and rules of court? For reasons that are described elsewhere and need not be repeated here, the Kentucky Rules of Evidence (K.R.E.) came into existence through concurrent enactment by the General Assembly and Kentucky Supreme Court and thus are endowed with all the attributes of both statutes and rules of court. So, how do you change them when the inevitable need to do so arises, a question made both interesting and difficult by the fact that there is no institutional mechanism for concurrent lawmaking by the General Assembly and supreme …
Interpretation Of The Kentucky Rules Of Evidence—What Happened To The Common Law?, Robert G. Lawson
Interpretation Of The Kentucky Rules Of Evidence—What Happened To The Common Law?, Robert G. Lawson
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
The Kentucky Rules of Evidence, which became effective on July 1, 1992, dramatically transformed the method by which lawyers and judges address evidence issues. Before the adoption of the Rules, the law of evidence consisted mostly of a vast collection of common law rulings, accumulated over two centuries and inaccessible to lawyers and judges for all practical purposes. In addressing an evidence issue, participants had to first deal with the problem of "finding" the law-distilling from a morass of conflicting common law precedents the ones applicable to the issue at hand, a task regularly producing contention rather than agreement and, …
The Supreme Court And Our Culture Of Irresponsibility, Mary J. Davis
The Supreme Court And Our Culture Of Irresponsibility, Mary J. Davis
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
This article chronicles the Supreme Court's expansion of the “culture of irresponsibility,” where institutional defendants are freed from tort liability with no check on the abuse of such immunity. Professor Davis describes the Court's progression toward immunity in products liability decisions of the past decade including East River Steamship, Boyle, Cipollone, and Lohr. Noting the effect of the Court's decisions in promoting institutional irresponsibility, Professor Davis encourages the Court to use its “cultural influence” and reconsider its broad extension of immunity which has spread to situations and institutional defendants the Court never imagined.
"I Vote This Way Because I'M Wrong": The Supreme Court Justice As Epimenides, John M. Rogers
"I Vote This Way Because I'M Wrong": The Supreme Court Justice As Epimenides, John M. Rogers
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
Possibly the most unsettling phenomenon in the Supreme Court's 1988 term was Justice White's decision to vote contrary to his own exhaustively stated reasoning in Pennsylvania v. Union Gas Co. His unexplained decision to vote against the result of his own analysis lends support to those who argue that law, or at least constitutional law, is fundamentally indeterminate. Proponents of the indeterminacy argument sometimes base their position on the allegedly inescapable inconsistency of decisions made by a multi-member court. There is an answer to the inconsistency argument, but it founders if justices sometimes vote, without explanation, on the basis of …
Comments On Professor Rotunda's Essay, Richard H. Underwood
Comments On Professor Rotunda's Essay, Richard H. Underwood
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
In this comment, Professor Richard H. Underwood provides a response to An Essay on the Constitutional Parameters of Federal Impeachment, by Professor Ronald D. Rotunda. Rotunda’s essay was published in the Kentucky Law Journal, Vol. 76, No. 3, pp. 707-732.
Karu Gene White V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appellee's Brief 1980-Sc-0489
Karu Gene White V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appellee's Brief 1980-Sc-0489
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Karu Gene White V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Reply Brief 1980-Sc-0489
Karu Gene White V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Reply Brief 1980-Sc-0489
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Gary Wayne Wilson V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appellant's Brief 1980-Sc-0489
Gary Wayne Wilson V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appellant's Brief 1980-Sc-0489
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Karu Gene White V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appendix 1980-Sc-0489
Karu Gene White V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appendix 1980-Sc-0489
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Myron F. Gleberman V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Supplemental Brief 1980-Sc-0466
Myron F. Gleberman V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Supplemental Brief 1980-Sc-0466
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Mark Douglas Cain V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Reply Brief 1980-Sc-0474
Mark Douglas Cain V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Reply Brief 1980-Sc-0474
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Mark Douglas Cain V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appellee's Brief 1980-Sc-0474
Mark Douglas Cain V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appellee's Brief 1980-Sc-0474
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Myron F. Gleberman V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Supplemental Brief 1980-Sc-0466
Myron F. Gleberman V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Supplemental Brief 1980-Sc-0466
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Edgar Gilbert Miller V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appellant's Brief 1980-Sc-0474
Edgar Gilbert Miller V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appellant's Brief 1980-Sc-0474
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Kenneth Ford V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Reply Brief 1980-Sc-0507
Kenneth Ford V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Reply Brief 1980-Sc-0507
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Henry Lee Hall V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Reply Brief (P) 1980-Sc-0360
Henry Lee Hall V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Reply Brief (P) 1980-Sc-0360
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Henry Lee Hall V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Petition For Rehearing 1980-Sc-0360
Henry Lee Hall V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Petition For Rehearing 1980-Sc-0360
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Continental Casualty Company V. Cora Smith, Appellee's Brief 1980-Sc-0460
Continental Casualty Company V. Cora Smith, Appellee's Brief 1980-Sc-0460
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Kenneth Ford V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appellee's Brief 1980-Sc-0507
Kenneth Ford V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Appellee's Brief 1980-Sc-0507
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Central Bank And Trust Company, A Kentucky Corporation, As Executor Of The Estate Of Garvice D. Kincaid, Deceased; W. E. Burnett, Jr. E. F. Schaeffer, Jr., And H. Hart Hagan, Jr., As The Membership Composing The Unincorporated Advisory Committee Under The Will Of Garvice D. Kincaid, Deceased; General Management Associates, Inc., A Kentucky Corporation; Lexington Finance Company, A Kentucky Corporation; And H. Hart Hagan, Jr. Individually And As President Of General Management Associates, Inc. V. Joan D. Kincaid, Supplemental Brief 1980-Sc-0353
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Stanley Green V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Reply Brief 1980-Sc-0492
Stanley Green V. Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Reply Brief 1980-Sc-0492
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Geneva Mae Perkins, Now Dyer V. Charles Elbert Read, And Charles Emery Read, Amicus Brief 1980-Sc-0368
Geneva Mae Perkins, Now Dyer V. Charles Elbert Read, And Charles Emery Read, Amicus Brief 1980-Sc-0368
1980-1989
No abstract provided.
Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Department For Human Resources V. Kentucky Products, Inc. And Floyd K. Nixon, Appellee's Brief 1980-Sc-0506
Commonwealth Of Kentucky, Department For Human Resources V. Kentucky Products, Inc. And Floyd K. Nixon, Appellee's Brief 1980-Sc-0506
1980-1989
No abstract provided.