Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
Agency -- 1961 Tennessee Survey, Elvin E. Overton
Agency -- 1961 Tennessee Survey, Elvin E. Overton
Vanderbilt Law Review
The topic "agency" includes the areas of "master and servant" as well as those of "principal and agent." There were few cases in these areas decided by the Tennessee courts during the period under survey. Generally, basic principles were applied to routine cases.In certain instances the reliance upon a prior fact determination avoided the necessity of an elaborate treatment of the facts. In one or two cases the court reached a result that may not be deemed desirable though supported by much authority. Significant points received less attention than they deserved in certain cases. In one case the basic question …
Contracts -- 1961 Tennessee Survey, Paul J. Hartman
Contracts -- 1961 Tennessee Survey, Paul J. Hartman
Vanderbilt Law Review
I. Offer and Acceptance--Notification of Acceptance Before Notification of Revocation--Duration of Offer with Fixed Expiration Date
II. Implied and Quasi Contract--Claim for Services Where Family Relationship Involved
III. Parol Evidence Rule--Application of Rule to Third Party Not a Party to the Written Instrument--Pre-existing Duty as Consideration
IV. Exculpatory Contracts--Contracting Against Liability for Consequences of Own Negligent Conduct
V. Agreement in Restraint of Trade-Agreement of Seller of Business Not to Compete--Enforcement of Restraint in Area Greater than Required to Protect Purchaser
Comment: The Enforcement Of Agreements To Arbitrate, Irving Kovarsky
Comment: The Enforcement Of Agreements To Arbitrate, Irving Kovarsky
Vanderbilt Law Review
Three 1960 Supreme Court decisions' have limited the ability of litigants to challenge successfully the jurisdiction and award-making powers of labor arbitrators. The limitations imposed by the Court upon the judiciary's power to question the arbitrator, a reversal of traditional procedure, is of great significance and will unquestionably necessitate some readjustment on the part of management. This article attempts to place these recent developments in perspective and to suggest briefly certain practical changes in the attitudes of courts and contract negotiators that may result from them.
Constitutional Law -- 1961 Tennessee Survey, James C. Kirby, Jr.
Constitutional Law -- 1961 Tennessee Survey, James C. Kirby, Jr.
Vanderbilt Law Review
Although a relatively small number of cases turned upon constitutional questions during the survey period, some important decisions were handed down in this area. In five separate decisions legislation was declared unconstitutional. The impact of the constitutional decisions varies from the right to millions of dollars in school funds in Shelby County and the salary of the clerk of General Sessions Court of Clay County to approval of permanent tenure for all franchised automobile dealers in the state. The scope of governmental power over the administration of estates, condemnation of private property and the pursuit of private businesses brought forth …
Restitution -- 1961 Tennessee Survey, John W. Wade
Restitution -- 1961 Tennessee Survey, John W. Wade
Vanderbilt Law Review
"A person who has been unjustly enriched at the expense of an-other is required to make restitution to the other." This is the first section of the Restatement of Restitution.' It indicates the principle underlying a field of the law coordinate with tort and contract.About a dozen cases during the survey period may be classified as raising a problem within this general subject. They do not cover the whole range of the field and have here been classified on a pragmatic rather than an analytical basis.
Services are normally rendered under a contract which governs the nature of the services …
Financing Industrial Development In The South, Margie F. Pitts
Financing Industrial Development In The South, Margie F. Pitts
Vanderbilt Law Review
Proponents of public industrial building financing justify their position by pointing to the need to supplement private investment and to raise the level of per capita income in areas which have chronically suffered from this condition. The view one adopts of such financing is often couched on the high theme of free enterprise versus governmental participation. Yet the problem may also be viewed from the perspective of the South and its immediate needs.In the long run, it might well be that this program will have served to furnish a starting point for the process of development which would lead to …