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Full-Text Articles in Law

Insurance - Right Of Insurer Against An Insured Who Has Released The Tortfeasor After Receiving Payment From The Insurer, James A. Lee Nov 1940

Insurance - Right Of Insurer Against An Insured Who Has Released The Tortfeasor After Receiving Payment From The Insurer, James A. Lee

Michigan Law Review

Plaintiff insured the defendant against loss on his car due to collision, paid its liability when the defendant's car was damaged by a third party, and took an assignment of plaintiff's claim against the third party to that extent. Defendant then released the third party from liability and plaintiff brought this action to recover the amount paid to the defendant. Held, plaintiff could recover from defendant only for the loss it had sustained by the release, and since plaintiff had failed to prove it could have recovered anything from defendant, it had shown no cause of action. Century Ins. …


Scope Of The Business: The Borrowed Servant Problem, Talbot Smith Jun 1940

Scope Of The Business: The Borrowed Servant Problem, Talbot Smith

Michigan Law Review

If your client wants to erect an office building he may be advised of the cost within narrow limits. The necessary expenditure will be X dollars plus Y lives or limbs. If his talents take the turn of bridge construction similar computations may be made. To carry forward to completion either of these projects he must use materials of various kinds, and he must use men. The expenditure of the human, animate, material is as inevitable as the expenditure of the inanimate. With increased care and skill the curve of expenditure of the human material will approach the asymptote of …


Unfair Competition - Truthful Disparagement Of A Trader's Reputation, W. Wallace Kent Jun 1940

Unfair Competition - Truthful Disparagement Of A Trader's Reputation, W. Wallace Kent

Michigan Law Review

Plaintiff sued for treble damages under the Anti-Trust Act, alleging that the defendants had conspired and combined to drive him out of the securities business. Plaintiff alleged that to accomplish their purpose the defendants published statements as to plaintiff's "criminal record." The facts are not clear, but it appears from the report that the crimes in question were committed twenty years previously, during plaintiff's youth. The trial court instructed the jury that "if that information was true [as to plaintiff's criminal record], the Better Business Bureau, regardless of its purpose in disseminating the information, would not be liable, is not …


Master And Servant-Assault And Battery Apr 1940

Master And Servant-Assault And Battery

Indiana Law Journal

Recent Case Notes


Auto Owner's Liability For Injury Caused By Guest Permitted To Drive - Powers V. State, Use Of Reynolds Jan 1940

Auto Owner's Liability For Injury Caused By Guest Permitted To Drive - Powers V. State, Use Of Reynolds

Maryland Law Review

No abstract provided.


Quasi-Contracts -- Unsolicited Performance Of A Statutory Duty, Edward S. Biggar Jan 1940

Quasi-Contracts -- Unsolicited Performance Of A Statutory Duty, Edward S. Biggar

Michigan Law Review

An Indiana statute required county officers to publish reports of public business in two newspapers, representing the leading political parties of the county. Plaintiff, one of the two newspapers in Decatur county, printed the required notices without first obtaining official authorization. After defendant had disallowed the claim for this service, plaintiff appealed to the circuit court, there obtaining a verdict. Defendant appealed from the denial of its motion for a new trial. Held, that plaintiff had performed an obligation created by law and was entitled to recover on quasi-contract principles. On motion for rehearing, defendant urged the statute prohibiting recovery …


Libel And Slander - Defamation By Radio - Absolute Liability Of Broadcasting Company, Michigan Law Review Jan 1940

Libel And Slander - Defamation By Radio - Absolute Liability Of Broadcasting Company, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

The defendant broadcasting company leased its facilities to a commercial advertising corporation for the transmission of a series of sponsored radio programs. During the course of one of these broadcasts a comedian, employed by the advertiser, suddenly interpolated an extemporaneous remark, "That's a rotten hotel," in reference to plaintiff's hotel. A script for each program was prepared in advance, submitted to the defendant for approval, and followed exactly by the performers. The interjection in question did not appear in the script and had not been made at rehearsal. Plaintiff brought trespass for defamation, and from a judgment on a verdict …