Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Constitutional Law

2010

Due process

Golden Gate University School of Law

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Roche V. Worldwide Media, Inc.: Evaluating Where Minimum Contacts Meets Cyberspace, Ryan Thomas Sep 2010

Roche V. Worldwide Media, Inc.: Evaluating Where Minimum Contacts Meets Cyberspace, Ryan Thomas

Golden Gate University Law Review

In Roche v. Worldwide Media, Inc., the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia discussed the issue of personal jurisdiction in the context of cyberspace. The court determined that Worldwide Media's web site was passive and that asserting personal jurisdiction based solely on the maintenance of a web site, without more, would violate the Due Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Roche decision reaffirmed the Eastern District of Virginia's position on personal jurisdiction in the context of cyberspace. Specifically, this decision applies the logic of the "sliding scale" test borrowed from the United States District Court …


Expanding The Jurisdictional Reach For Intentional Torts: Implications For Cyber Contacts, Christopher Allen Kroblin Sep 2010

Expanding The Jurisdictional Reach For Intentional Torts: Implications For Cyber Contacts, Christopher Allen Kroblin

Golden Gate University Law Review

Originally, the foundation of jurisdictional jurisprudence in the United States rested on the premise that no state could exercise jurisdiction over a person outside its territorial borders. With the advent of modern industrial society, solely territorial based notions of sovereignty and jurisdiction became strained and unworkable. The concept that a state has control over everything within its borders and nothing beyond began to erode. As a result, during the twentieth century, the courts began to shift their focus from a territorial concept of jurisdiction to a notice-based concept. State courts exercised jurisdictional powers beyond their geographical territory so long as …


Robinson At Large In The Fifty States: A Continuation Of The State Bills Of Rights Debate In The Search And Seizure Context, Perry A. Schaffer, Richard D. Harmon, Terry J. Helbush Aug 2010

Robinson At Large In The Fifty States: A Continuation Of The State Bills Of Rights Debate In The Search And Seizure Context, Perry A. Schaffer, Richard D. Harmon, Terry J. Helbush

Golden Gate University Law Review

No abstract provided.