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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Parable Of The Forms, Samuel L. Bray
The Parable Of The Forms, Samuel L. Bray
St. John's Law Review
(Excerpt)
It might be good for each department to have its own form, or it might be better to have one form for the whole campus. That is an open question. It depends on how different the repair requests are in different departments, and on the value of specialization. It depends on whether we want some complexity about the choice of forms or if we want radical simplicity about the number of forms, with all of the complexity residing within a single form.
So, too, it might be good to have different forms of action. That way, everyone knows upfront …
The Parable Of The Forms, Samuel L. Bray
The Parable Of The Forms, Samuel L. Bray
Journal Articles
This is a parable about the forms of action, code pleading, and the "civil action" of the Federal Rules.
The Abolition Of The Forms Of Action In Virginia, William Hamilton Bryson
The Abolition Of The Forms Of Action In Virginia, William Hamilton Bryson
Law Faculty Publications
The common law procedure for initiating actions at law in the English courts required a plaintiff to obtain a writ invoking the jurisdiction of the court and to file a declaration setting forth the facts that justified instigation of the suit and established the cause of the action. This clumsy and archaic system of litigation was abolished by a single chop of the legislative guillotine in New York in 1848. England followed suit in 1875, and the United States federal courts in 1938. Writs and declarations were replaced by simple forms which were copied from the practice of the equity …
Limitations And The Federal Courts, William Wirt Blume, B. J. George Jr.
Limitations And The Federal Courts, William Wirt Blume, B. J. George Jr.
Michigan Law Review
Though as a practical matter it is difficult to secure passage of uniform legislation in all states, particularly when the subject matter has so long been considered as of local interest only, the need for such legislation in the case of the statute of limitations seems clear. To the extent that such a statute is adopted, the problem of varying limitation periods upon particular causes of action and similar causes of action will be removed. Only by a uniform state treatment of the problem will the conflict among federal districts resulting from the uniformity of result requirement of Erie Railroad …
Karlen: Primer Of Procedure, Charles W. Joiner
Karlen: Primer Of Procedure, Charles W. Joiner
Michigan Law Review
A Review of PRIMER OF PROCEDURE. By Delmar Karlen.
Karlen: Primer Of Procedure, Charles W. Joiner
Karlen: Primer Of Procedure, Charles W. Joiner
Michigan Law Review
A Review of PRIMER OF PROCEDURE. By Delmar Karlen.
Cases On Procedure, Annotated. Common Law Pleading, Edson R. Sunderland
Cases On Procedure, Annotated. Common Law Pleading, Edson R. Sunderland
Books
“No subject is more intimately connected with the history and development of our law than common law pleading. In sharp contrast with the other great system of law, that founded by the Romans, the common law has not been the product of legislation, but of litigation. It has grown up in the atmosphere of courts of justice. Such a genesis would necessarily give it a strong procedural favor, and would tend to emphasize remedies at the expense of rights. Procedure might therefore be expected to play a much larger part in the development of the common law than in the …