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Articles 1261 - 1290 of 1338
Full-Text Articles in Law
Federal Appellate Review Of Excessive Or Inadequate Damage Awards
Federal Appellate Review Of Excessive Or Inadequate Damage Awards
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Supreme Court And Its Lawyer Critics, Robert B. Mckay
The Supreme Court And Its Lawyer Critics, Robert B. Mckay
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Place And Function Of Judicial Review In The Administrative Process, Robert Kramer
The Place And Function Of Judicial Review In The Administrative Process, Robert Kramer
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Constitutional Law -- 1958 Tennessee Survey, Elvin E. Overton
Constitutional Law -- 1958 Tennessee Survey, Elvin E. Overton
Vanderbilt Law Review
State constitutional law decisions, lacking the universality of application of many other fields of the law, are vital and of significance frequently only to the local bar and local public officials. There is another difference between state constitutional law decisions, and federal constitutional law decisions: state courts are inclined to deal with state constitutional issues with an emphasis on the pragmatic problem of deciding the case and getting it out of the way,rather than with an emphasis on completing the blue print-of seeking to establish the general principle which reflects the conflicting policies struggling for recognition. In most United States …
Municipal Incorporation On The Urban Fringe: Procedures For Determination And Review, Daniel R. Mandelker
Municipal Incorporation On The Urban Fringe: Procedures For Determination And Review, Daniel R. Mandelker
Louisiana Law Review
No abstract provided.
Administrative Law--Scope Of Judicial Review--Substantial Evidence Rule, J. O. F.
Administrative Law--Scope Of Judicial Review--Substantial Evidence Rule, J. O. F.
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Mandamus To Review Administrative Action In West Virginia, Ray Jay Davis
Mandamus To Review Administrative Action In West Virginia, Ray Jay Davis
West Virginia Law Review
Limitation by law of governmental action and legal responsibility of officials are ramparts in defense of constitutional democracy. The American people expect all branches of government-executive and legislative, as well as judicial-to protect us against arbitrary official action. Lawyers, however, are primarily interested in judicial restraints and limitations upon officialdom. This article is an examination of the West Virginia law concerning one of the methods used by courts to control administrative officers-the writ of mandamus.
Administrative Law -- 1957 Tennessee Survey, James B. Earle
Administrative Law -- 1957 Tennessee Survey, James B. Earle
Vanderbilt Law Review
Only a few cases by the Tennessee Supreme Court decided during the survey year considered questions of general administrative law. These concerned the timing and extent of judicial review of administrative action and the conduct of hearings by agencies.
Prerequisites to Judicial Review: Whether available administrative remedies must be exhausted by a litigant before seeking a review or other relief by court action is a question not always capable of exact prediction.' The "long settled rule of judicial administration that no one is entitled to judicial relief for a supposed or threatened injury until the prescribed administrative remedy has been …
Administrative Law - Scope Of Judicial Review - Substitution Of Judgment, Frederick W. Ellis
Administrative Law - Scope Of Judicial Review - Substitution Of Judgment, Frederick W. Ellis
Louisiana Law Review
No abstract provided.
Judicial Review In Europe, Gottfried Dietze
Judicial Review In Europe, Gottfried Dietze
Michigan Law Review
The years following the Second World War witnessed a wave of constitution making in Europe. In East and West alike, popular government was instituted through new basic laws. But whereas the constitutions of Eastern Europe established a Rousseauistic form. of democracy through the creation of an omnipotent legislature, those of the West, while reflecting a belief in parliamentary government, to a larger or smaller degree limited the power of the legislature through the introduction of judicial review. This acceptance of judicial review can be attributed mainly to two factors. It sprung from a distrust of a parliamentarism under which, during …
Administrative Law -- 1956 Tennessee Survey, James B. Earle
Administrative Law -- 1956 Tennessee Survey, James B. Earle
Vanderbilt Law Review
Questions of the scope and timing of judicial review of administrative agency action were again before the courts during the period covered by this survey. Timing of Judicial Review: The problem of "timing" of judicial review of administrative action includes questions of the availability of administrative remedies and whether their exhaustion must be required before court action; ripeness for review, usually associated with the issuance of agency rules and regulations; and jurisdictional questions vis-a-vis the agency and the court.
Administrative Law--Extent Of Judicial Review--Rulings Of The Federal Communications Commission, B. F. D.
Administrative Law--Extent Of Judicial Review--Rulings Of The Federal Communications Commission, B. F. D.
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Gray Vs. Powell And The Scope Of Review, Bernard Schwartz
Gray Vs. Powell And The Scope Of Review, Bernard Schwartz
Michigan Law Review
In dissenting from the decision of the Supreme Court in a celebrated administrative-law case, Justice Jackson once declared: "I give up. Now I realize fully what Mark Twain meant when he said, 'The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it.' " It cannot be denied that the learned justice's reaction is one which is often felt by students of Supreme Court jurisprudence. This has been particularly true of the field involved in the case which called forth Justice Jackson's plaint--i.e., that of administrative law. American administrative lawyers have not infrequently had this same response to decisions of …
Administrative Law -- 1955 Tennessee Survey, Paul H. Sanders
Administrative Law -- 1955 Tennessee Survey, Paul H. Sanders
Vanderbilt Law Review
Judicial review of administrative agency action, with emphasis upon the limited nature of such review, has again been of major importance in Tennessee Administrative Law during the survey period, This is shown to be true not only in the number of decisions but also in the frequent utilization (and apparent broadening) of the doctrine of Hoover Motor Express Co. v. Railroad & Public Utilities Commission in according finality to administrative action. In addition to holdings on various aspects of judicial review, the Tennessee appellate courts contributed important decisions during the survey period dealing with delegation of legislative power and the …
Administrative Law--Judicial Review--Certification Of Questions Of Law, R. H. T. Jr.
Administrative Law--Judicial Review--Certification Of Questions Of Law, R. H. T. Jr.
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Justice Jackson And The Judicial Function, Paul A. Weidner
Justice Jackson And The Judicial Function, Paul A. Weidner
Michigan Law Review
Much of the pattern of division in the present Supreme Court is traceable to basic differences of opinion regarding the proper role of a judge in the process of constitutional adjudication. Some students of the Court, yielding to the current fashion of reducing even intricate problems to capsule terms, have tried to explain the controversy by classifying the justices as either "liberals" or "conservatives." A second school poses the disagreement largely in terms of judicial "activism" as opposed to judicial "restraint." It is this view that has the greater relevance for the present discussion. C.H. Pritchett, one of the leading …
Still Further On Judicial Review Of Classification By Selective Service System, Or Judicial Review Of Draft Board Classification Based On Ruling That Selectee Is Not A Minister - Dickinson V. United States, James C. Cox Jr.
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
Judicial Control Of Administrative Agencies In Indiana: Ii, Ralph F. Fuchs
Judicial Control Of Administrative Agencies In Indiana: Ii, Ralph F. Fuchs
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
A Decade Of Administrative Law: 1942-1951, Bernard Schwartz
A Decade Of Administrative Law: 1942-1951, Bernard Schwartz
Michigan Law Review
The past ten years have been particularly momentous ones in the development of American administrative law. It is, indeed, not too much to say that there are few, if any, aspects of that field which have not witnessed important changes during that time. It is for this reason that an analysis of administrative law developments during the past decade should prove useful. However valuable an annual survey of the law may be, it suffers from the shortness of the period which it covers. An analysis of developments during a decade enables a broader perspective to be obtained.
It will be …
The Steel Seizure Case: Congress, The President And The Supreme Court, Paul G. Kauper
The Steel Seizure Case: Congress, The President And The Supreme Court, Paul G. Kauper
Michigan Law Review
Questions relating to the legislative authority of Congress and of the several states have given rise to an immense mass of constitutional litigation ever since the time that the Supreme Court in Marbury v. Madison asserted its power of judicial review. Many of these cases have turned on the division of legislative authority between Congress and the state legislatures under our federal system. Yet within this same span of time relatively few cases have arisen to challenge the assertions of presidential power, and in only a few instances has the Court found occasion to speak at length on the questions …
The Role Of The Privy Council In Judicial Review Of The Canadian Constitution--A Post-Script, Edward Mcwhinney
The Role Of The Privy Council In Judicial Review Of The Canadian Constitution--A Post-Script, Edward Mcwhinney
Vanderbilt Law Review
In its Preamble, the Constitution of Canada speaks of the desire of the Provinces of Canada to be "federally united into one Dominion under the Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, with a Constitution similar in principle to that of the United Kingdom." Historically, then, the Constitution of Canada like the Constitution of the United States, stems from a compact between a number of different territorial units: the Provinces of Lower Canada (Quebec), Upper Canada (Ontario), and the two eastern maritime Provinces of Nova Scotia and New Brtnswick, joined together in 1867 to form the new …
The Original And Exclusive Jurisdiction Of The United States Supreme Court, Wencelas J. Wagner
The Original And Exclusive Jurisdiction Of The United States Supreme Court, Wencelas J. Wagner
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Avoidance Of Constitutional Issues In The United States Supreme Court: Liberties Of The First Amendment, Burton C. Bernard
Avoidance Of Constitutional Issues In The United States Supreme Court: Liberties Of The First Amendment, Burton C. Bernard
Michigan Law Review
The frequently criticized reluctance of the Supreme Court to consider complaints of unconstitutional governmental action is manifested in the utilization by the Court of various rules of avoidance of constitutional issues. Uncompromising defense of this self-restraint would not be easy to reconcile with the Court's pronounced sensitivity, in modem times, to the liberties of the First Amendment. This article will examine the considerations underlying the traditional restraint, and will suggest that the Court should modify several of its rules of avoidance, at least when liberties of the First Amendment are threatened.
Separation Of Powers Revisited, Reginald Parker
Separation Of Powers Revisited, Reginald Parker
Michigan Law Review
Since administrative law is law that governs, and is applied by, the executive branch of government, it is necessarily as old as that branch. As long as executive and judiciary were one and the same and the king at the head of both, all of the law was in fact "administrative" though the term was not used. When, however, out of the amorphous mass of the legal order a fixed body of law courts began to emerge with jurisdiction over the most important legal problems, the term "administrative law," had it been used, would have acquired a specific meaning. Property, …
Administrative Agencies And The Court, Frank E. Cooper
Administrative Agencies And The Court, Frank E. Cooper
Michigan Legal Studies Series
The limits which courts place on the powers of administrative tribunals have particular significance to practicing attorneys and law students. It is largely to the extent that such limits are imposed, that our government remains a government of laws and not a government of men.
The following pages have been written to describe the standards which the courts impose upon administrative agencies, thereby controlling and limiting their powers. More particularly, the writer has sought: (1) to bring together the leading cases in which the courts have laid down the principles that govern frequently litigated questions in contests between the agencies …
Judicial Control Of Administrative Action By Means Of The Extraordinary Remedies In Minnesota, John A. Bauman, Stefan A. Riesenfeld, Richard C. Maxwell
Judicial Control Of Administrative Action By Means Of The Extraordinary Remedies In Minnesota, John A. Bauman, Stefan A. Riesenfeld, Richard C. Maxwell
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Corwin: Liberty Against Government, Michigan Law Review
Corwin: Liberty Against Government, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
A Review of LIBERTY AGAINST GOVERNMENT. By Edward S, Corwin .
Extent Of Judicial Review Of Administrative Tax Determinations In West Virginia, D. D. J. Jr.
Extent Of Judicial Review Of Administrative Tax Determinations In West Virginia, D. D. J. Jr.
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Administrative Law-Developments: 1940-1945 (A Service For Returning Veterans), E. Blythe Stason
Administrative Law-Developments: 1940-1945 (A Service For Returning Veterans), E. Blythe Stason
Michigan Law Review
No period in American history has ushered in more sweeping changes in the legal structure than has the last decade and a half. No area of the law has witnessed more rapid development than has administrative law. A sketch of the progress of administrative law during the five-year period 1940 to 1945 reveals an important refining of the "quasi judicial" procedures--procedures which, because of their swift and topsy-turvy growth, can well use a little refining.
The purpose of the following survey is two-fold; first, to outline the more significant developments of the last half decade, relating the new materials to …
A Further Legal Inquiry Into Renegotiation: Ii, Charles W. Steadman
A Further Legal Inquiry Into Renegotiation: Ii, Charles W. Steadman
Michigan Law Review
Several issues concerning constitutionality of the Renegotiation Act were discussed in a previous article. That prior inquiry was, of course, not complete, nor is it possible here to exhaust all of these problems. The changes which the Revenue Act of 1943 made in renegotiation together with the manifest importance of this subject and the national interest which has been created by the challenges made concerning its constitutionality warrant further inquiry into this phase of the act. The issues of delegation of legislative authority, impairment of contracts, due process and judicial review, as well as the nature of renegotiation as a …