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Articles 1 - 14 of 14
Full-Text Articles in Law
Recent Supreme Court Employment Law Developments, Olati Johnson, Douglas D. Scherer
Recent Supreme Court Employment Law Developments, Olati Johnson, Douglas D. Scherer
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
Contract Law [2014], Yihan Goh, Pey Woan Lee, Chee Ho Tham
Contract Law [2014], Yihan Goh, Pey Woan Lee, Chee Ho Tham
Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law
No abstract provided.
The Relationship Between Defense Counsel, Policyholders, And Insurers: Nevada Rides Yellow Cab Toward "Two-Client" Model Of Tripartite Relationship. Are Cumis Counsel And Malpractice Claims By Insurers Next?, Jeffrey W. Stempel
Scholarly Works
It happens constantly in civil litigation. An insurance company hires a lawyer to defend its policyholder from a third party’s claim of injury. But just who is the lawyer’s “client?” Is it the policyholder who is the named defendant in the case and is “represented” in court proceedings? Or is it the insurer who, in most cases, selected the attorney, pays the attorney, supervises the litigation, and has (by the terms of the liability insurance policy) the right to settle the case, even over the objections of the policyholder? Ordinarily, the liability insurer has both the duty to defend a …
Agenda: Public Lands Mineral Leasing: Issues And Directions, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center
Agenda: Public Lands Mineral Leasing: Issues And Directions, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center
Public Lands Mineral Leasing: Issues and Directions (Summer Conference, June 10-11)
University of Colorado School of Law professor Lawrence J. MacDonnell served as the conference organizer and as a member of the faculty.
Federal leasing programs, especially for oil and gas and coal, have been undergoing important changes in recent years. This conference will provide an overview and an update for those involved in public lands mineral development. Significant new issues also will be addressed.
Promissory Estoppel: Principle From Precedents: Ii, Benjamin F. Boye
Promissory Estoppel: Principle From Precedents: Ii, Benjamin F. Boye
Michigan Law Review
It is ancient learning that a person is free to refuse to accept an appointment as agent but that "acceptance must be followed by execution or prompt resignation." Though such was the law of the Romans of Justinian's time, it has taken our courts many years to reach the same conclusion. Indeed, it was not until the Restatement of Agency was published in 1933 that the basis of liability of one who gratuitously undertook to act as agent for another was expressed in approximately the same form.
Recent Developments In Restitution: Rescission And Reformation For Mistake, Including Misrepresentation, Edward S. Thurston
Recent Developments In Restitution: Rescission And Reformation For Mistake, Including Misrepresentation, Edward S. Thurston
Michigan Law Review
In accordance with underlying equitable principles, restitution is granted where a mistake has been made by one or both parties to a transaction or series of transactions because of which one of them has obtained an advantage which it would be unjust for him to retain.
There are two forms of relief, one based upon rescission, the other upon reformation. The first seeks the undoing of a transaction and the replacing of the parties into the positions, as nearly as may be, originally occupied. On the other hand, reformation seeks the performance of an agreement as the parties to it …
Quasi-Contract-Impossibility Of Performance-Restitution Of Money Paid Or Benefits Conferred Where Further Performance Has Been Excused, J. R. Swenson S.Ed.
Quasi-Contract-Impossibility Of Performance-Restitution Of Money Paid Or Benefits Conferred Where Further Performance Has Been Excused, J. R. Swenson S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
In a recent Oklahoma case, City of Barnsdall v. Curnutt, an attorney was retained by a city to prosecute a damage claim arising out of the pollution of a stream. The attorney was to receive a 40 per cent contingency fee. The defendant in the action made an offer in compromise of $25,000 which was rejected by the city on advice of the attorney. Before the action was brought to trial the attorney died. The counsel substituted by the city obtained a settlement in which the city received $35,000, out of which a fee of $ 10,500 was paid …
Contracts-Bills And Notes-Precedent Debt As Consideration In The Law Of Contracts And Negotiable Instruments, Shubrick T. Kothe S.Ed.
Contracts-Bills And Notes-Precedent Debt As Consideration In The Law Of Contracts And Negotiable Instruments, Shubrick T. Kothe S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
Today, there is little left of the sixteenth century rule that a precedent debt is consideration sufficient to ground an action of assumpsit. Modern cases, such as those where a debt is barred by the Statute of Limitations or discharged in bankruptcy, where it is historically applicable, generally do not rest upon that theory. As a practical matter, it makes little difference. These cases achieve a just result, and have been confined to standard fact situations. The doctrine seems clearly at variance with the rule that consideration cannot be past, and serves no useful purpose today. Cases where this problem …
The Federal Constitution Today-Important Decisions Of The Supreme Court In The Last Eight Years 1937-1944 Inclusive, Burke Shartel
The Federal Constitution Today-Important Decisions Of The Supreme Court In The Last Eight Years 1937-1944 Inclusive, Burke Shartel
Michigan Law Review
In recent years one often hears lawyers say that the Constitution is gone; or one hears them echo the remark of Charles E. Hughes, made while he was Governor of New York, "We are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the judges say it is," and then perhaps add that lawyers can no longer determine with any assurance what the judges will do or will say the Constitution is. Such expressions and reactions are not unnatural in any period of rapid doctrinal change. All contain a large element of truth. Certainly much of the Constitutional Law is gone …
A Valuable Handbook, John B. Waite
A Valuable Handbook, John B. Waite
Michigan Law Review
A review of VOLD ON SALES. (Hornback Series) By Lawrence Vold.
Cases On Suretyship, Robert E. Bunker
Cases On Suretyship, Robert E. Bunker
Books
A casebook with selected cases to aid the teaching of suretyship.
Cases On The Law Of Damages, Floyd R. Mechem
Cases On The Law Of Damages, Floyd R. Mechem
Books
Note to the Second Edition: “The following selection of cases in the law of Damages has been made primarily for use in connection with the lectures upon that subject given in the Law department of the University of Michigan. The purpose has been particularly to supply illustration of the application of principles referred to in the lectures, and partly to supplement the lectures by rounding out the view of certain fields not otherwise completely developed.”
Note to the Third Edition: “While the general features remain the same, the number of cases in this edition has been considerably increased in the …
Cases On Guaranty And Suretyship, Robert E. Bunker
Cases On Guaranty And Suretyship, Robert E. Bunker
Books
The cases appearing in this volume have been selected for use in connection with the lecture on Suretyship given in the Law Department of the University of Michigan. Barring omission of irrelevant matter in some instances and of the briefs and arguments of counsel in all instances, the cases appear in this volume as they appear in the reports themselves. Uniformity in spelling and punctuation has not been attempted or thought desirable. In regard to these matters, the report have been followed, except in cases of manifest error.
The purpose has been to put into the hand of the student …
Cases On The Law Of Agency, Floyd R. Mechem
Cases On The Law Of Agency, Floyd R. Mechem
Books
The following collection of cases has been prepared, at the request of several leading educators, to accompany the writer’s treatise on the law of agency, the purpose being to illustrate the text by object lessons gathered from the reports. Nothing in the way of annotation has been attempted, beyond an occasional reference to similar cases, as it is thought that the text of the treatise supplies all that is needed in that direction. To make a selection of cases from the great number upon the subject is a difficult task and one in reference to which opinions will necessarily differ. …