Search for: "D. T. Marshall" Results 1561 - 1580 of 2,066
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3 Jun 2010, 7:12 pm by Jonathan H. Adler
“I’d like to reverse Strickland too,” Kagan wrote in her memo to Marshall three years later, “but something tells me this court won’t buy the idea. [read post]
2 Jun 2010, 10:00 pm by resistance
  I’d argue that it isn’t free speech, since it is about action. [read post]
28 May 2010, 12:16 pm by Joe Mullin
Marshall Phelps agreed with Spangenberg that legislative reforms won't have a big impact on the business of patent litigation. [read post]
25 May 2010, 1:28 pm by Ray Dowd
  But the better practice, and I'd say the far better practice is to marshal the evidence that your client owns a copyright, get it in writing, and record it before you start a lawsuit. [read post]
24 May 2010, 4:45 am by Susan Brenner
He also “dispute[d] the judge's use of a summary procedure to convict him of contempt. [read post]
21 May 2010, 1:41 pm by Alison LaCroix
Hunter’s Lessee (1816) that “[i]t is the case, then, and not the court, that gives the jurisdiction. [read post]
19 May 2010, 5:18 pm
The patent examiner is responsible for marshalling the references whose teachings are most relevant to the claimed invention, and evaluating the claimed invention against these teachings, from the viewpoint of a person of ordinary skill in the field of invention. [read post]
18 May 2010, 11:01 pm
[T]he conditions of confinement to which Mr. [read post]
17 May 2010, 10:01 pm by Ted Frank
Kagan took a far-left position on the Fourteenth Amendment in a memo on the DeShaney case when she clerked for Justice Marshall—but, of course, so did Justice Marshall, and it was 23 years ago. [read post]
14 May 2010, 3:16 am by Alfred Brophy
Second, because Roberts said he'd gone to law school thinking he might become a legal historian! [read post]
13 May 2010, 1:40 pm by Fred Goldsmith
Marshal Service arrested the vessel on March 30, 2010. [read post]
10 May 2010, 4:51 am by Jeff Gamso
  No surprise there, of course.The last Justice who'd ever practiced what a friend used to describe as "little guy law" was Thurgood Marshall. [read post]