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Articles 61 - 74 of 74
Full-Text Articles in Law
Book Review, William Samore
Book Review, William Samore
Cleveland State Law Review
Reviewing Luther J. Binkley, Contemporary Ethical Theories, Philosophical Library, Inc., 1961
Book Review, Jack F. Smith
Book Review, Jack F. Smith
Cleveland State Law Review
Reviewing Robert Klonsky, Legal Essays of the Plaintiff's Advocate, Central Book Company, 1961
European View Of Heart Attack Compensation, Pieter J. Hoets
European View Of Heart Attack Compensation, Pieter J. Hoets
Cleveland State Law Review
This article gives a comparison of different European views on heart attack compensation. The author choose to analyze the views of Germany, The Netherlands, and France.
X-Ray Malpractice, Lucien B. Karlovec
X-Ray Malpractice, Lucien B. Karlovec
Cleveland State Law Review
Doctors today are subjected to many malpractice suits involving non-surgical injuries. Common among these nonsurgical injuries are x-ray injuries. Most of the injuries produced by x-rays have been excessive skin reactions, i.e., burns, occurring during either diagnostic or therapeutic procedures. The improper use of x-rays can produce damage other than skin burns, i.e., fibrosis (in effect, shrinkage) of internal organs, sterility or prenatal injuries.
Evidence Problems In Juvenile Delinquency Proceedings, Ronald J. Harpst
Evidence Problems In Juvenile Delinquency Proceedings, Ronald J. Harpst
Cleveland State Law Review
Some of the most perplexing problems facing the attorney defending a child charged with a delinquency have their inception in misunderstandings, lack of uniformity and loose application of evidential rules. In order to serve the best interests of the children who are before it, and to obtain necessary facts with which to formulate a rehabilitation plan, the courts have a tendency to waive strict adherence to evidence rules. The methodical attorney wonders how the court can serve the best interests of the child and yet seemingly not afford to the child the equal protection of its laws of evidence.
Teachers' Tort Liability, Thomas A. Dugan
Teachers' Tort Liability, Thomas A. Dugan
Cleveland State Law Review
The recent notoriety in the Cleveland area attendant upon several reports of alleged batteries committed by teachers has served to focus the attention of both the educator and the citizen on this aspect of liability. This attention may well result in some necessary judicial and legislative clarification in this area, but it may tend to obscure other equally important facets of the teacher's tort liability. It is with this thought in mind that this article is written. The article itself is intended as much for teachers as it is for attorneys. Where possible, it attempts to transcend the attorney's usual …
Electroencephalography (Eeg) In Head Injuries, Andre A. Weil
Electroencephalography (Eeg) In Head Injuries, Andre A. Weil
Cleveland State Law Review
Clinical electroencephalography has gained remarkably in popularity during the past twenty years. Correspondingly we find it with more frequency in medico-legal problems, particularly the ones pertaining to head injuries.
Copyright And Design Patents - The Common Zone Between, Albert P. Sharpe Iii
Copyright And Design Patents - The Common Zone Between, Albert P. Sharpe Iii
Cleveland State Law Review
The overlapping of our present-day Copyright and Design Patent Laws, apparently initially created by random legislative development and recently aggravated by the decision of the Supreme Court in Mazar v. Stein, has resulted in a legal morass of substantial proportions. The purpose of this paper is to explore briefly the influence which gave rise to this situation, to discuss the present state of the law and its practical impact upon the practicing patent advocate, and finally to review and evaluate proposed legislation, past and present, in an effort to determine the possible course of future developments.
Corporate Employee Tax Status For The Professional Man, Carmen A. Stavole
Corporate Employee Tax Status For The Professional Man, Carmen A. Stavole
Cleveland State Law Review
Professional associations (i.e., corporations) have been specifically authorized by several state legislatures recently, contrary to the old rule that practice of a learned profession by a corporation is forbidden. Among these states are Connecticut, Illinois, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The purpose is to make available to professional men the tax advantages of corporate employee status.
Police View Of The Intoxicant, Leo R. Collins
Police View Of The Intoxicant, Leo R. Collins
Cleveland State Law Review
Many law enforcement officers have found, on being subjected to cross-examination, that in their efforts to arrest an intoxicant they had failed to gather enough competent evidence illustrating the intoxicant's condition at the time of arrest. As a result of many "not guilty" verdicts, modern law enforcement agencies have progressed from the time when an officer would merely ask the subject to repeat a rhyme that the subject would find difficult to say if he were drunk, to modern methods where intoximeter or other machine tests, movies, and tape recordings are used to supplement the officer's report.
Landlord's Control Of Leased Premises, Albert G. Schleicher
Landlord's Control Of Leased Premises, Albert G. Schleicher
Cleveland State Law Review
Where the landlord has retained possession and control of a part of the demised premises, he may be liable to the tenant or one in the right of the tenant for failure to exercise ordinary care to keep that part of the premises over which he has retained possession and control in a reasonably safe condition. The problem arises over what portion of the premises the landlord has retained possession and control, especially when the lease contains no provision on this subject. A review of the principles and a sampling of various fact situations involving possession and control of the …
Book Review, Rudolf H. Heimanson
Book Review, Rudolf H. Heimanson
Cleveland State Law Review
Reviewing Richard A. Wasserstrom, The Judicial Decision: Toward a Theory of Legal Justification, Stanford University Press, 1961
Mortgage Theory Of Ohio, James Jay Brown
Mortgage Theory Of Ohio, James Jay Brown
Cleveland State Law Review
It will be the function of this paper to explore the theory of the real estate mortgage as it is being used in the confused state of Ohio. The theories will be identified and defined. From this academic introduction, practical uses of the theories will be suggested. This will be followed by an analysis of Ohio case decisions since 1929. The conclusion of this analysis will be a determination of whether the state has been consistent in its reasoning and theory.
Heart Attack As Compensable Injury, Marvin D. Silver
Heart Attack As Compensable Injury, Marvin D. Silver
Cleveland State Law Review
The original intention of the author was to propose the idea that a heart attack might be compensable as an occupational disease. However, after extensive research and deliberation, it appears evident that the universally accepted construction and interpretation of the term "occupational disease" is invulnerable to the inclusion therein of the heart attack incident.