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Articles 8551 - 8575 of 8575

Full-Text Articles in Law

Judicial Method And The Constitutionality Of The N.I.R.A., Ralph F. Fuchs Jan 1935

Judicial Method And The Constitutionality Of The N.I.R.A., Ralph F. Fuchs

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


A Postscript -- The Schechter Case, Ralph F. Fuchs Jan 1935

A Postscript -- The Schechter Case, Ralph F. Fuchs

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Report Of The Indiana State Committee On Governmental Economy Of The Administration Of Justice In Indiana Dec 1934

Report Of The Indiana State Committee On Governmental Economy Of The Administration Of Justice In Indiana

Indiana Law Journal

This report is published in the Indiana Law Journal for the information of the members of the Indiana State Bar Association through the courtesy of the Governor of the State of Indiana. The preface to this report was prepared by Dean Bernard C. Gavit of the Indiana University School of Law, a member of the Indiana State Committee on Governmental Economy.


Effects Of Inflation On Private Contracts: Germany, 1914-1924, John P. Dawson Dec 1934

Effects Of Inflation On Private Contracts: Germany, 1914-1924, John P. Dawson

Michigan Law Review

The German experience with inflation is unique not only in the magnitude of the ultimate disaster but in the wealth and variety of the record which it left behind. From that experience we may still learn much. The problems presented at successive stages of the German inflation differ in degree but not in kind from those which appear in any major shift in the general level of prices. The devices, legal and economic, for restoring an equilibrium thus destroyed must be essentially the same in any great country organized, as Germany was, for specialized, large-scale production. From a study of …


The Economic Aspects Of Inflation, Leonard L. Watkins Dec 1934

The Economic Aspects Of Inflation, Leonard L. Watkins

Michigan Law Review

In every large industrial country there is a considerable group that urges inflation as a path to national prosperity. They have made least impression on monetary policies in countries that experienced severe inflation during the war and post-war years. But in the United States, where war-time inflation was relatively moderate and where losses in the recent depression have been especially severe, inflationary measures have been adopted and agitation persists for the adoption of still more radical policies.


Can A State Regulate Prices Of A Private Industry?, Corbett Mcclellan May 1934

Can A State Regulate Prices Of A Private Industry?, Corbett Mcclellan

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


The Interstate Commerce Clause And Nra, Maurice M. Feuerlicht Jr. Apr 1934

The Interstate Commerce Clause And Nra, Maurice M. Feuerlicht Jr.

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Capitalism, The United States Constitution And The Supreme Court, Hugh Evander Willis Jan 1934

Capitalism, The United States Constitution And The Supreme Court, Hugh Evander Willis

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Constitutional Law-Mortgage Foreclosure Moratorium Statutes Nov 1933

Constitutional Law-Mortgage Foreclosure Moratorium Statutes

Michigan Law Review

The present economic crisis has been productive of much drastic legislation which is directed at the relief of the debtor class. Rather than let the depression run its course, legislative bodies have endeavored to alleviate some of the evils by so-called "emergency'' statutes. A common type of such enactment is that designed to protect mortgagors against foreclosure and sale of their property. Some of these statutes provide that the period of redemption after foreclosure sale shall be extended for a definite period, others that the courts may stay foreclosures, and some provide that there shall be no foreclosure sales unless …


Executive Power In Emergencies, Maurice S. Culp Jun 1933

Executive Power In Emergencies, Maurice S. Culp

Michigan Law Review

The events of the last few months indicate that the American chief executive is capable of vigorous action in emergencies. The executive frequently has to use the armed forces of the State or Nation in the performance of his duty to see that the laws are faithfully executed in troubled districts, but it is a new experience to have the governors and the President take emergency measures in combatting a depression. The banking crisis, which first received executive notice in Nevada last November and which attained alarming proportions with Governor Comstock's "bank holiday" in Michigan, culminated in the national holiday …


The Commerce Clause Of The United States Constitution, By Bernard C. Gavit, Frank N. Richman Apr 1933

The Commerce Clause Of The United States Constitution, By Bernard C. Gavit, Frank N. Richman

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


'Recent Social Trends In The United States" Report Of The President's Research Committee, Robert Cooley Angell Mar 1933

'Recent Social Trends In The United States" Report Of The President's Research Committee, Robert Cooley Angell

Michigan Law Review

Never before has a particular civilization taken so complete an inventory of its own activities as that presented in the two-volume Report of the President's Research Committee on Social Trends. Its more than 1600 pages are literally crammed with significant data regarding almost every conceivable aspect of American life, data gathered with great care and thoroughness by research men of unquestioned ability and scholarly standing.


The Constitutionality Of The Recovery Program, Ralph F. Fuchs Jan 1933

The Constitutionality Of The Recovery Program, Ralph F. Fuchs

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Controlling The Production Of Oil, Donald H. Ford Jun 1932

Controlling The Production Of Oil, Donald H. Ford

Michigan Law Review

The present pressing need for controlling the production of oil is due to a variety of causes. The principal factors that have contributed to the existing situation to "the flood of oil that takes on the proportions of a national disaster'' are: (1) A rapid improvement in exploratory technique, geological and geophysical, which has resulted in "bringing in" too many new oil fields. (2) Enormous advances in the art of drilling, especially as regards rapidity of drilling and the depths attained. (3) Improved methods of refining which furnish an ever-increasing percentage of gasoline from. the crude. (4) The development of …


State Administrative Supervision Of Municipal Indebtedness, E. Blythe Stason Apr 1932

State Administrative Supervision Of Municipal Indebtedness, E. Blythe Stason

Michigan Law Review

One of the lessons being drawn from the present economic depression, and especially from the financial straits of municipalities, is the very real need of more adequate restriction upon the power of cities, towns, villages, counties, school districts and other local governments to burden themselves and their taxpayers with excessive public debt.


Judicial Attitudes In The Customs-Union Case, Robert Elden Mathews Mar 1932

Judicial Attitudes In The Customs-Union Case, Robert Elden Mathews

Michigan Law Review

The World Court decision of last September in the Austro-German Customs case has given rise in many quarters to an attack upon the Court itself.

The criticism has not been based solely upon the eight-to-seven vote of the judges. We have too many one-man majorities in our own judiciary to find much concern there. But the alignment of nationalities from which the two groups of judges come has been the source of the greatest adverse comment. For it so happens that the majority, holding illegal the proposed Customs Union, was composed of judges many of whose nations were opposed to …


Legislation - Wisconsin Unemployment Insurance Act Mar 1932

Legislation - Wisconsin Unemployment Insurance Act

Michigan Law Review

Culminating years of activity in its state legislature, Wisconsin on January twenty-eighth adopted the Groves Bill (Bill No. 8, A) providing for compulsory unemployment insurance, the first legislation of the sort to be enacted in the United States. For a discussion of unemployment insurance measures introduced at the 1931 legislatures see 30 MICH. L. REV. 410 (January, 1932). The compulsory plan is to become operative July 1, 1933, unless Wisconsin employers employing more than 175,000 workers in the state have by that date established approved voluntary insurance systems.


Our Economic Problem: The Concentration Of Wealth, Hugh Evander Willis Jan 1932

Our Economic Problem: The Concentration Of Wealth, Hugh Evander Willis

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Report On The Cost Of Crime, Herbert F, Taggart Nov 1931

Report On The Cost Of Crime, Herbert F, Taggart

Michigan Law Review

The full title of the twelfth report of the National Commission on Law Observance and Enforcement is "Report on the Cost of Crime and Criminal Justice in the United States." A more descriptive title, suggested by the actual content of the report, would be "The Economic Consequences of Crime." The report constitutes a volume of 657 pages, of which the report proper covers 453 pages, and various appendices make up the balance. For the hasty reader the most essential parts are the first eight pages, constituting the Commission's comments, and the summary and recommendations, of Messrs. Goldthwaite H. Dorr and …


Some Legal Problems Connected With Stock Market Transactions, S. Ashley Guthrie, Henry F. Tenney Nov 1930

Some Legal Problems Connected With Stock Market Transactions, S. Ashley Guthrie, Henry F. Tenney

Michigan Law Review

If any one were asked what was the most dramatic event of the last year, he probably refer at once to the collapse of the great Bull Market on the New York Stock Exchange. This was not only a dramatic event, but it was literally a tragedy for hundreds of thousands of people. Securities shrank to less than half their former inflated values and hundreds of millions of dollars in cash and paper profits were lost over night, or possibly we should say over two nights, for the crash occurred in two stages, one in October and one in November, …


Book Review. Keezer, D. M. And May, S., The Public Control Of Business, Ralph F. Fuchs Jan 1930

Book Review. Keezer, D. M. And May, S., The Public Control Of Business, Ralph F. Fuchs

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Social Progress, By Ulysses G. Weatherly, Paul L. Sayre May 1927

Social Progress, By Ulysses G. Weatherly, Paul L. Sayre

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Caveat Emptor And The Judicial Process, John B. Waite Feb 1925

Caveat Emptor And The Judicial Process, John B. Waite

Articles

"There are many issues in the law whose solution has an essentially economic cost. There is one issue in particular, however, of immense and most important economic effect, which has been decided and re-decided, but which, strangely enough, the courts never seem to have considered on the merits of its economic relations and effects....

"...[O]ught one to be permitted safely, if honestly, to intrust possession of goods to others; or should one have power safely, if honestly, to buy goods from those in possession...."


Book Reviews, Edwin W. Patterson, Edson R. Sunderland, C E. Griffin May 1922

Book Reviews, Edwin W. Patterson, Edson R. Sunderland, C E. Griffin

Michigan Law Review

The title of this brilliant little volume might, more accurately, have been, "The Spirits of the Common Law," for it depicts the common law as the battleground of many conflicting spirits, from which a few relatively permanent ideas and ideals have emerged triumphant. As a whole, the book is a pluralistic-idealistic interpretation of legal history. Idealistic, because Dean Pound finds that the fundamentals of the 'common law have been shaped by ideas and ideals rather than by economic determinism or class struggle; he definitely rejects a purely economic interpretation of legal history, although he demands a sociological one (pp. io-ii). …


Net Income And Judicial Economics, Henry Rottschaefer Apr 1922

Net Income And Judicial Economics, Henry Rottschaefer

Michigan Law Review

A legal system does not function in a vacuum of abstractions. It is part of a general institutional framework of an organized society. Its content is determined by concrete individual and social needs and activities. Hence modern jurisprudence conceives of law as a means for securing interests. The appraisal of its rules and principles requires an evaluation of the significant elements of the situation to which they apply. A narrow, complacent formalism is the penalty of failure in this regard. No one would deny the emphasis modern society places upor its commercial and industrial interests, nor the many points of …