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Full-Text Articles in Law
Nationwide Service Of Process: Due Process Limitations On The Power Of The Sovereign, Robert A. Lusardi
Nationwide Service Of Process: Due Process Limitations On The Power Of The Sovereign, Robert A. Lusardi
Faculty Scholarship
There are a number of instances in which a federal court asserts personal jurisdiction by service of process beyond the territorial limits of the state in which it sits. The most common examples of these assertions of jurisdiction are the use of a state's long-arm statute and the "bulge" provision of the federal rules. But, in addition, there are a number of statutes by which Congress has authorized nationwide service of process in particular circumstances.
It is generally accepted that Congress may authorize expansion limits of the states in which it sits, including authorization of extraterritorial service of process. However, …
A Causation Approach To Criminal Omissions, Arthur Leavens
A Causation Approach To Criminal Omissions, Arthur Leavens
Faculty Scholarship
This Article examines the scope of criminal laws that impose liability for failures to prevent a proscribed harm. Traditionally, courts have only imposed criminal sanctions upon individuals for their failure to act where the individual has a "legal duty" to prevent a specific harm. Professor Leavens rejects this conventional approach as being an artificial and ultimately unfair way to set the limits of omission liability. He asserts that in order for the courts validly to utilize any concept -- including "legal duty"-- to define the scope of omission liability, that concept must fairly reflect the underlying criminal prohibition; namely, that …