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Full-Text Articles in Law
Your Honor What I Meant To State Was . . .: A Comparative Analysis Of The Judicial And Evidentiary Admission Doctrines As Applied To Counsel Statements In Pleadings, Open Court, And Memoranda Of Law, Ediberto Román
Faculty Publications
This article analyzes the law regarding party admissions; specifically as applied to statements in pleadings, open court, and memoranda of law. In particular, this article will: (1) provide a detailed description of the two types of admissions counsel make; (2) address courts' treatment of attorneys' admissions in different circumstances; and (3) provide an argument for treating attorneys' admissions in memoranda of law similar to admissions in open court or in pleadings. The goal of this article is to provide a blueprint of the law on admissions, an area of law where all to often counsel pays little attention, and to …
Intramural Reforms: How The U.S. Courts Of Appeals Have Helped Themselves, Thomas E. Baker
Intramural Reforms: How The U.S. Courts Of Appeals Have Helped Themselves, Thomas E. Baker
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
A Catalogue Of Judicial Federalism In The United States, Thomas E. Baker
A Catalogue Of Judicial Federalism In The United States, Thomas E. Baker
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
A View To The Future Of Judicial Federalism: “Neither Out Far Nor In Deep”, Thomas E. Baker
A View To The Future Of Judicial Federalism: “Neither Out Far Nor In Deep”, Thomas E. Baker
Faculty Publications
Professor Baker briefly sketches some likely future scenarios for state courts and federal courts and then highlights what he expects will be the future opportunities for cooperation and judicial federalism. Included are discussions of the separate futures of the state and federal courts and then how the two judiciaries will relate to each other in the years ahead.