Search for: "BUTLER v. SOUTH CAROLINA" Results 1 - 20 of 36
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
8 Feb 2024, 9:36 am by Eugene Volokh
The problem with this claim is that it contradicts a scholar who wrote in a 2021 book that "the Civil War began" only in April 1861, when "South Carolina fired on Fort Sumter. [read post]
7 Jul 2023, 1:03 pm by Ryan Goodman
Ryan (Associate Professor, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) and Thomas J. [read post]
23 Jan 2023, 7:30 am by Guest Blogger
Their images should be treated with the same scorn as those depicting Chief Justice Roger Taney, the author of the execrable decision in Dred Scott v. [read post]
20 Nov 2022, 9:53 am by David Kopel
Supreme Court affirmed in New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. [read post]
6 May 2022, 5:50 pm by Gregory Forman
Lewis, 392 S.C. 381, 709 S.E.2d 650 (2011) reads like a dry academic discussion of the standard of review under Article V, § 5 of the South Carolina Constitution. [read post]
7 Apr 2021, 12:23 pm by Adam Faderewski
Groth, 73, of Charlotte, North Carolina, died February 16, 2021. [read post]
10 Feb 2020, 4:36 am
The evidence established that Charleston, South Carolina is a well-known tourist destination and thus CHARLESTON "is the name of a place known generally to the public. [read post]
14 Jan 2018, 4:55 am by Tennessee Employment Law Letter
So the Charlottesville marchers from California and South Carolina might have some recourse und [read post]
17 Sep 2017, 11:34 am by John Mikhail
  Butler was a Revolutionary War hero and represented South Carolina in the first U.S. [read post]
6 Sep 2017, 4:52 am by Hon. Richard G. Kopf
Solomons family of Sumter, South Carolina to remember him. [read post]
6 Aug 2017, 8:00 am by Howard Friedman
LEXIS 119374 (D SC, July 31, 2017), a South Carolina federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendation (2017 U.S. [read post]
12 Jun 2015, 6:38 am by John Mikhail
”  This statement sounds very much like the interpretive principle underlying one of John Marshall’s most famous remarks in McCulloch v. [read post]
22 May 2015, 2:55 am by NCC Staff
Sumner made fun of Brooks’ relative, Senator Andrew Butler of South Carolina, who had suffered from a stroke, and he used language that compared the South’s use of slavery to prostitution. [read post]