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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Need For A Neighborhood Legal Service And The New York Experience, Charles Grosser Oct 1965

The Need For A Neighborhood Legal Service And The New York Experience, Charles Grosser

Buffalo Law Review

No abstract provided.


Book Reviews, Elliot E. Cheatham, Joseph B. Board, Jr., Monroe Berkowitz Jun 1965

Book Reviews, Elliot E. Cheatham, Joseph B. Board, Jr., Monroe Berkowitz

Vanderbilt Law Review

The Law Practice of Alexander Hamilton By Julius Goebel, Ed. and Associate Editors New York and London: Columbia University Press, 1964. Pp. XXV, 898.

reviewer: Elliot E. Cheatham

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Lawyers in Politics: A Study in Professional Convergence By Heinz Eulau and John D. Sprague Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill,1964. Pp. 164. $1.95.

reviewer: Joseph B. Board, Jr.

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Occupational Disability and Public Policy Edited by Earl F. Cheit and Margaret S. Gordon. New York: John Wiley and Sons,Inc., 1963. Pp. xii, 446.

reviewer: Monroe Berkowitz


Legislation, Law Review Staff Jun 1965

Legislation, Law Review Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

In increasing measure the legal profession has come to recognize its public responsibilities. One of these responsibilities is to protect clients from the dishonesty of lawyers. The lawyer who handles funds of a client is a fiduciary in the highest sense. Occasionally, however, an attorney misappropriates the funds of his client. The client's remedy against the lawyer is probably futile, for an embezzler will generally have no funds to cover the loss. Although misappropriation is rare it receives much publicity when it does occur. Embezzlement and loss with consequent publicity impair the reputation of the entire legal profession.In dealing with …


The Expanding Horizons Of Legal Services--Ii, Monrad G. Paulsen Jun 1965

The Expanding Horizons Of Legal Services--Ii, Monrad G. Paulsen

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Scientific Eclat And Technological Change: Some Implications For Legal Education, George T. Frampton Jun 1965

Scientific Eclat And Technological Change: Some Implications For Legal Education, George T. Frampton

Michigan Law Review

The law-trained man has frequently been viewed as faced toward the past and preoccupied with precedent, form, words, technicalities, and money. Well might such a man be the fitting product of an educational diet of moldering appellate case opinions taken Socratically with a few crusts of casebook "notes" and classroom lapses into lecture. This is not a man for the season of scientific successes or for a society transformed by technological change.


The Expanding Horizons Of Legal Services--I, Monrad G. Paulsen Apr 1965

The Expanding Horizons Of Legal Services--I, Monrad G. Paulsen

West Virginia Law Review

In no country of the world are lawyers so important or so influential as they are in America. Lawyers dominate legislative bodies almost everywhere in the United States; they often provide executive leadership for business enterprize and voluntary associations. The best lawyers are respected highly and rewarded with the greatest prizes. The theme of this paper is that the services offered by the legal profession, a profession already engaged in hundreds of tasks, are rapidly expanding. Some new ways of working are emerging. Some old functions are being performed in a new manner. More resources are being provided for that …


Infants' Liability For Legal Services, Victor M. Gordon Apr 1965

Infants' Liability For Legal Services, Victor M. Gordon

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Group Legal Services And The Right Of Association, Michigan Law Review Apr 1965

Group Legal Services And The Right Of Association, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

The United States Supreme Court has recently curtailed the reach of state statutes that prohibit solicitation of legal business. In two unprecedented opinions the Court has held that the soliciting activities of lay organizations fall within the protection of the right of association.


The Defense Of Indigent Persons Accused Of Crime In Washington—A Survey, Richard B. Amandes, George Neff Stevens Apr 1965

The Defense Of Indigent Persons Accused Of Crime In Washington—A Survey, Richard B. Amandes, George Neff Stevens

Washington Law Review

Eight months before the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Gideon v. Wainwright the American Bar Association, in accordance with its long existing concern with the problem of indigent defendants, authorized the appointment of a special committee with associate subcommittees in each state "to study present practices and to initiate, coordinate and accelerate efforts to assure adequacy of the defense provided indigent persons accused of crime in the United States..." The work of state subcommittees was coordinated and directed by the American Bar Foundation. This article is based upon the report prepared by the Washington subcommittee, and follows …


Law Quadrangle Notes Jan 1965

Law Quadrangle Notes

Law Quadrangle (formerly Law Quad Notes)

School publishes new soviet code; Class quality shows steady improvement; Wellman outlines steps in selection of new Dean; "A Feeling for Justice" is new U-M television series; Cook lecturer cites six goals and policies for aiding Negro poor; Faculty news notes; Alaskans hit record level in Law School Fund giving; Yearbook sponsors are sought for 1965


Volume 32 (1964-1965) Jan 1965

Volume 32 (1964-1965)

Tennessee Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Unauthorized Practice Of Law: A Public Relations Problem, Carl Howell Jr. Jan 1965

The Unauthorized Practice Of Law: A Public Relations Problem, Carl Howell Jr.

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Judge-Jury-Counsel Relations In Kentucky, John E. Kennedy Jan 1965

Judge-Jury-Counsel Relations In Kentucky, John E. Kennedy

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Abuse Of Attorneys By Judges, Francis G. Homan Jr. Jan 1965

Abuse Of Attorneys By Judges, Francis G. Homan Jr.

Cleveland State Law Review

Popular notions have it that almost all misconduct in the courtroom is attributable to attorneys. Yet many practitioners before the bar have suffered abuse by members of the judiciary. How frequently this occurs is not known, but sometimes incidents of non-judicial conduct are revealed in other than case reports.


Group Representation By Attorneys As Misconduct, Richard M. Markus Jan 1965

Group Representation By Attorneys As Misconduct, Richard M. Markus

Cleveland State Law Review

This article is intended to consider the future of group retainers in light of the conflicting views of proponents and opponents. Attention will first be given to the "Canons of Professional Ethics" which affect this subject and the judicial decisions interpreting them. Next, an attempt will be made to evaluate the effect of the Supreme Court Brotherhood case, and other related decisions, upon the Canons. Finally, an effort will be made to anticipate the prospects of group legal service with a view towards implementing or modifying present standards.


Split Loyalty: An Ethical Problem For The Criminal Defense Lawyer, Gerald S. Gold Jan 1965

Split Loyalty: An Ethical Problem For The Criminal Defense Lawyer, Gerald S. Gold

Cleveland State Law Review

Nowhere in law do ethical considerations play a greater part or come into greater conflict than in the defense of those accused of crime. The lawyer defending an accused owes a duty to his client, a duty to society, and a duty to the court. The duties to each are not completely clear and when the various loyalties conflict, fair, safe, and moral resolutions are most difficult.


New Rules Of The Supreme Court Of Ohio (An Analysis), Lee E. Skeel Jan 1965

New Rules Of The Supreme Court Of Ohio (An Analysis), Lee E. Skeel

Cleveland State Law Review

The Supreme Court of Ohio recently completed revision of its Rules of Practice. They became effective on July 1, 1964. Three subjects coming within the inherent power and within the constitutional and statutory jurisdiction of the Court are contained in the revision; that is, procedures for presenting cases in which the Court has original jurisdiction, cases which come within its appellate and revisory jurisdiction as provided in each case by the Constitution and Statutes of Ohio (Article IV, Sections 2 and 6), and admission to the practice of the law in Ohio and disciplinary procedures for members of the bar …


Depositions And Power Of Notary To Punish For Contempt In Ohio, Richard W. Schwartz Jan 1965

Depositions And Power Of Notary To Punish For Contempt In Ohio, Richard W. Schwartz

Cleveland State Law Review

The deposition plays an important role in the modern-day practice of law. The enormous backlog of cases in the courts requires preservation of precious testimony during the long wait prior to trial. In addition, the deposition is a valuable tool in evaluating a case, especially during settlement negotiations. Finally, the deposition is a prime means of discovering vital information. The notary public presides at the deposition, and is invested with quasi-judicial powers, including the power to punish for contempt. This paper will briefly survey both the procedural aspects of the deposition and the quasi-judicial power of the notary public.


Disciplinary Proceedings By The S. E. C. Against Attorneys, Paul J. Kemp Jan 1965

Disciplinary Proceedings By The S. E. C. Against Attorneys, Paul J. Kemp

Cleveland State Law Review

The securities and exchange commission, created by Section 4 (a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, has from its earliest days proclaimed its right to determine who may appear before or transact business with it in a representative capacity and in Rule 2 (e) of its present Rules of Practice has reserved to itself the right, in its discretion, to "deny, temporarily or permanently, the privilege of appearing or practicing before it in any way to any person who is found by the Commission after notice of and opportunity for hearing in the matter (1) not to possess the …


Attorney's Liability In Non-Client And Foreign Law Situations, John E. Martindale Jan 1965

Attorney's Liability In Non-Client And Foreign Law Situations, John E. Martindale

Cleveland State Law Review

This article will examine the liability of an attorney for an incorrect opinion where the complainant is not the attorney's client. It will also give special consideration to the problem of giving advice on the law of a jurisdiction other than the attorney's own state.


Reasonable Fee And Professional Discipline, William C. Romell Jan 1965

Reasonable Fee And Professional Discipline, William C. Romell

Cleveland State Law Review

The question propounded by this article is - what exactly is the "reasonable" fee, and conversely under what conditions may a fee be adjudged so unreasonable that the legal profession may administer justifiable discipline to the attorney charging such a fee?


Weyrauch: The Personality Of Lawyers, John Donnelly M.D. Jan 1965

Weyrauch: The Personality Of Lawyers, John Donnelly M.D.

Michigan Law Review

A Review of The Personality of Lawyers. By Walter 0. Weyrauch