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24 Dec 2012, 9:30 pm by RegBlog
       “Supreme Court and PTO Produce New Rules on ‘Laws of Nature’ Patents”by Alisa Melekhina, RegBlog Staff (April 19)   In its decision in Mayo Collaborative Serv. v. [read post]
22 May 2023, 3:52 pm by Josh Blackman
Brown's most high-profile case was Feds for Medical Freedom v. [read post]
31 Jan 2019, 11:34 am by Schachtman
Liability claims against remote suppliers of a natural raw material such as silica sand, however, made no sense in terms of the rationales of tort law. [read post]
11 Mar 2024, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
  But that, obviously, does not prevent a state from deciding that no one should vote or, more to the point, that everyone should experience inconvenient hurdles to casting their ballots. [read post]
12 Dec 2019, 5:07 am by Eugene Volokh
Imagina Consulting, Inc., 18-CV-8956 (CS) (noting a finding on the record at a conference held on November 13, 2019, that Liebowitz had "willfully lied to the Court"); Sands v. [read post]
17 Oct 2015, 8:25 am by Thomas G. Heintzman
In this case, the over-deflection of the concrete floor slabs caused damage to reinforcing bar in the floor, cracking of the floor and a sloped floor that had to be sanded down, all involving an expense of $14 million. [read post]
27 May 2015, 7:42 am by Rebecca Tushnet
  Read listservs where professors & librarians are, they talk about that as a grain of sand for an oyster. [read post]
20 Nov 2013, 7:41 pm
But this alternative does not so much displace as extend conventional constitutional theory as a set of static premises that structure the organization of legitimate governance units. [read post]
20 Jul 2013, 10:39 am by Larry Catá Backer
But this alternative does not so much displace as extend conventional constitutional theory as a set of static premises that structure the organization of legitimate governance units. [read post]
22 Aug 2012, 5:00 am by DaytonDUI
Sand, 43 Ohio St.2d 79, 330 N.E.2d 908 (1975) and more definitively at Newark v. [read post]