Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Antitrust (24)
- Competition (6)
- Sherman Act (6)
- Antitrust laws (5)
- Immunity (4)
-
- Monopoly (4)
- Single entity (4)
- Grand jury (3)
- Rule of reason (3)
- American Needle (2)
- Antitrust compliance (2)
- Antitrust investigation (2)
- Attorney (2)
- Concealment (2)
- Consumers (2)
- Damages (2)
- Debriefing (2)
- Distributive technological capacity (2)
- Document destruction (2)
- Economic procompetitive benefits (2)
- First amendment (2)
- Horizontal merger (2)
- Indictment (2)
- Lundbeck (2)
- Market (2)
- Misprison of felony (2)
- NCAA (2)
- Player draft (2)
- Price competition (2)
- Price-fixing (2)
- Publication Year
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 61 - 64 of 64
Full-Text Articles in Law
Jurisdiction In International Application Of United States Antitrust Laws, Hiroshi Fukuda
Jurisdiction In International Application Of United States Antitrust Laws, Hiroshi Fukuda
Cleveland State Law Review
However, the trend to apply United States antitrust laws to international trade agreements has given rise to another important question, namely the jurisdictional problem of antitrust laws. Many people, both in this country and abroad, criticized this trend as an abuse of power and invasion of foreign sovereignty. The objective of this paper is, therefore, to analyze the underlying theories of jurisdiction with respect to antitrust laws and to discover the existing jurisdictional limitations imposed by the courts on themselves.
Hudson Fair Trade Case - The Need For Constitutional Amendment, Richard W. Pogue
Hudson Fair Trade Case - The Need For Constitutional Amendment, Richard W. Pogue
Cleveland State Law Review
The Hudson case has dual significance. First, it is important in its holding of a relatively new concept in fair trade legislation-the "notice" or "implied contract" doctrine under which resellers are deemed to have entered into a legislatively defined contract by accepting goods with notice of the fair trade price limitations. This concept, previously upheld in Virginia, finds its counterpart in the current Quality Stabilization Bills pending in Congress which would include provision for a federal right to enforce resale price maintenance against resellers of branded commodities who are given prior notice of price restrictions. A second respect in which …
Ball, Bat And Bar, Harold Seymore
Ball, Bat And Bar, Harold Seymore
Cleveland State Law Review
Most Americans assume that they live under one set of laws which govern everybody. They also think that while monopolies and their abuses were once a problem, regulatory measures have long since eliminated or controlled them. The business of organized baseball proves that both these assumptions are mistaken. Recent operations of some baseball "companies" have underscored the falsity of these assumptions. The baseball business operates under its own complicated body of private law, and has been doing so ever since the business got its real start with the formation of the National League in 1876. Organized baseball is also a …
The Analogous Development Of The Fair Trade And Tax Limitation Movements, Frank E. Packard
The Analogous Development Of The Fair Trade And Tax Limitation Movements, Frank E. Packard
Cleveland State Law Review
The Fair Trade Act, or resale price maintenance, movement began in 1913. The movement to limit federal income, gift, and estate tax rates to twenty-five per cent in peacetime commenced in 1939. The fair trade act movement was spearheaded by the American Fair Trade League. The federal income, gift, and estate tax rate limitation movement is spearheaded by the Western Tax Council.