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- Indiana State Bar Association (8)
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- Fred C. Gause (2)
- Indiana (2)
- Notes (2)
- President (2)
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- Thomas C. Batchelor (2)
- Will Shafroth (2)
- Admission to practice (1)
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- American Bar Announcments (1)
Articles 1 - 30 of 44
Full-Text Articles in Legal Profession
Message Of The President, Fred C. Gause
Announcement Of Indiana Judicial Council
American Bar Association Notes, Will Shaffroth
American Bar Association Notes, Will Shaffroth
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Inherent Power Of The Judiciary, Henry M. Dowling
The Inherent Power Of The Judiciary, Henry M. Dowling
Indiana Law Journal
Address delivered by Henry M. Dowling of the Indianapolis Bar at the Annual Meeting of the Indiana State Bar Association September 7, 1935; first published in the October American Bar Association Journal and reprinted here with permission of that journal.
Message Of The Secretary, Thomas C. Batchelor
Message Of The Secretary, Thomas C. Batchelor
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Bar's Duty To The Public, Honorable Williams L. Ransom
The Bar's Duty To The Public, Honorable Williams L. Ransom
Indiana Law Journal
Address of Hon. William L. Ransom, President of the American Bar Association, at the annual meeting of the Indiana Bar Association on September 6, 1935.
A Proposed Plan Of Classification For The Law, Charles C. Ulrich
A Proposed Plan Of Classification For The Law, Charles C. Ulrich
Michigan Law Review
One of the greatest needs of the law today is a satisfactory plan of classification. Whenever codes have been drafted, or digests and encyclopedias of the law compiled, from the time of the Romans to the present, the first problem that presented itself was always that of classification. The question of classification was considered when the work of the American Law Institute was begun and the restatement of the law attempted, though it does not seem to have been given the attention it merited. And despite various schemes of legal classification that have been proposed in the course of time, …
May The Bar Set Its Own House In Order?, Lowell Turrentine
May The Bar Set Its Own House In Order?, Lowell Turrentine
Michigan Law Review
California is a particularly appropriate jurisdiction to be used as the basis for a study such as the present. Its State Bar Act of 1927 was one of the early, detailed, legislative attempts to confer self-governing powers upon the bar, its decisions have become leading cases on the questions of constitutionality and construction thus presented, and its reported disciplinary cases far outnumber those of any other state-baract jurisdiction. Consideration of the relative merits of different methods of bar integration is outside the scope of this paper. But no inference should be drawn from anything herein that a statutory bar of …
1935 Meeting Of The Pacific Coast Institute Of Law; Institute Proceedings, Anon
1935 Meeting Of The Pacific Coast Institute Of Law; Institute Proceedings, Anon
Washington Law Review
An event of the past summer which has been the subject of much favorable comment was the second annual meeting of the Pacific Coast Institute of Law the sessions of which were held in Condon Hall at the University of Washington under the sponsorship of the School of Law. The Institute was conducted in conjunction with the annual meeting of the Washington State Bar Association and over eight hundred persons, including judges, lawyers, law teachers and representatives of other professional fields, not only from the Pacific Coast states but from other sections of the United States and from Canada, were …
Message From The Secretary, Thomas C. Batchelor
Message From The Secretary, Thomas C. Batchelor
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
American Bar Association Notes, Will Shafroth
American Bar Association Notes, Will Shafroth
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
President's Annual Address, Wilmer T. Fox
President's Annual Address, Wilmer T. Fox
Indiana Law Journal
Address of Wilmer T. Fox, president of the Indiana State Bar Association, delivered at the annual meeting of the association, September 6, 1935.
Message From The President, Fred C. Gause
Proceedings Of The Annual Meeting
Report Of Program Committee Relative To Matters Pending Before The West Virginia Bar Association, J. H. Brennan, Charles G. Baker, Walter F. Ball, Russell B. Goodwin, James F. Shipman
Report Of Program Committee Relative To Matters Pending Before The West Virginia Bar Association, J. H. Brennan, Charles G. Baker, Walter F. Ball, Russell B. Goodwin, James F. Shipman
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Constitutional Law - Reinstatement Of Attorney - Constitutionality Of Pardon Statute - Legislative Encroachment On Judicial Power
Michigan Law Review
In proceedings based on the record of his conviction for attempted extortion, the petitioner was disbarred. Having received a full pardon from the governor, he sought reinstatement, relying on a statute which purported to make reinstatement mandatory on the court upon proof of the pardon. Held, the statute is unconstitutional in so far as it directs the court to reinstate a disbarred attorney without a showing of moral rehabilitation. It is an encroachment by the legislature upon the inherent power of the court to admit attorneys to practice and in effect vacates a judicial order by legislative mandate. In …
Publication Of The Restatement Of The Conflict Of Laws, Anon
Publication Of The Restatement Of The Conflict Of Laws, Anon
Washington Law Review
The Restatement of the Law of Conflict of Laws, recently. published by the American Law Institute Publishers, is the third project of the American Law Institute to be completed, having been preceded by the Restatements of Contracts and Agency. Two volumes on Torts have also been published. Like its companion volumes this work is the result of the joint efforts of a large group of experts in this field, in this case extending over a period of eleven years. The Reporter was Professor Joseph H. Beale of the Harvard Law School, who has spent some forty years in studying and …
Service Through Books, Anon
Service Through Books, Anon
Washington Law Review
The number and variety of law books now in use is so great that lawyers can not hope to possess relatively more than a very few. Law school libraries and bar association libraries can not afford the purchase of but a small fraction of those available for the use of the profession. The publication of new law books continues to grow from year to year. Several thousand appear each year, most of which can be made available for the use of the legal profession only through the facilities of the larger law libraries. Thus has come about the development in …