Search for: "Oklahoma v. Price" Results 81 - 100 of 258
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29 Jul 2018, 4:50 pm by INFORRM
IPSO The IPSO Blog has two posts this week- one on raising standards through training and another on a conversation from Women’s Hour where Charlotte Dewar discusses paparazzi with Katie Price. [read post]
29 Jun 2018, 5:25 am by Bobby Chen
Hodges, Lawrence v. [read post]
12 Jun 2018, 7:15 am by John Elwood
Constitution; and (2) whether Oklahoma’s [read post]
18 May 2018, 8:02 am by John Elwood
  He was convicted in Oklahoma state court and sentenced to death for killing another nation member within the nation’s historic territory in eastern Oklahoma. [read post]
23 Apr 2018, 8:28 am by Dan Carvajal
Some view property tax limitations as a sensible constraint on the growth of government, or as a fail-safe to avoid pricing people out of their own homes. [read post]
2 Feb 2018, 7:44 am
(Pix © Larry Catá Backer 2018)Since at least 1945 there have been significant efforts to produce global consensus on baseline norms through which states, individuals, and collectives could judge the legitimacy of state actors (and recently other transnational actors). [read post]
14 Dec 2017, 6:35 am by Dan Carvajal
The Supreme Court’s 1992 Quill Corp. v. [read post]
5 Dec 2017, 12:01 pm by ligitsec
Ralph Oman, Dechert, Price & Rhoads, Washington, D.C., as amicus. [read post]
9 Nov 2017, 6:31 am by Wolfgang Demino
A defendant in such an action may be entitled to an offset against the deficiency if the trial court determines that the fair market value of the property sold at foreclosure was greater than the foreclosure sales price. [read post]
9 Nov 2017, 6:31 am by Wolfgang Demino
A defendant in such an action may be entitled to an offset against the deficiency if the trial court determines that the fair market value of the property sold at foreclosure was greater than the foreclosure sales price. [read post]
26 Sep 2017, 6:41 am by Dan Carvajal
Key Findings The Ohio Commercial Activity Tax, a 0.26 percent tax on business gross receipts above $1 million, is a throwback to an earlier era of taxation, bringing back a tax type that had been in steady retreat for nearly a century. [read post]