Search for: "Little v State" Results 5141 - 5160 of 26,845
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21 Feb 2020, 12:12 pm by Amy Howe
Little Sisters of the Poor v. [read post]
21 Feb 2020, 6:36 am by Eric Goldman
The court says Yelp’s website constitutes a public forum (but only in the anti-SLAPP sense, not the state action sense, a point made in the uncited Prager U v. [read post]
18 Feb 2020, 7:43 am by Joy Waltemath
Supreme Court, in its unanimous 2014 decision in Integrity Staffing Solutions, Inc v. [read post]
17 Feb 2020, 1:27 pm by Ilya Somin
Nonetheless, the conventional wisdom holds that there is little, if any prospect of successfully challenging it in court, because the most obvious arguments against it were rejected by the Supreme Court in Trump v. [read post]
16 Feb 2020, 9:01 pm by Richard L. Revesz
Supreme Court will soon hear argument on Seila Law v. [read post]
15 Feb 2020, 10:06 am by Sandy Levinson
 90% of the American states offer a model--call it, if you wish, "a little laboratory of experimentation"--in how to achieve genuine independence. [read post]
15 Feb 2020, 7:35 am by John Floyd
  On January 28, 2020, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in United States v Chambliss dealt with such a case. [read post]
14 Feb 2020, 11:00 am by Public Employment Law Press
This proposal raises a potential conflict with Article V, Section 1 of the State Constitution, which grants the Comptroller the power to determine accounting methods, and is troubling with respect to transparency and accuracy in financial reporting. [read post]
14 Feb 2020, 11:00 am by Public Employment Law Press
This proposal raises a potential conflict with Article V, Section 1 of the State Constitution, which grants the Comptroller the power to determine accounting methods, and is troubling with respect to transparency and accuracy in financial reporting. [read post]
14 Feb 2020, 6:05 am by John-Paul Boyd, QC
” In Weir v Weir, (1986) 1 RFL (3d) 438 (BCSC), the court held that dependence arising from a “poor job market” qualified adult children for support, a conclusion that was expanded in Bruehler v Bruehler, (1985) 49 RFL (2d) 44 (BCCA) to include “a state of [economic] depression in a province. [read post]