Search for: "James v. Railroad Company" Results 1 - 20 of 88
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15 Aug 2018, 11:22 am by Christine Corcos
On July 27, 1934, Harry James Tompkins lost his arm, supposedly when an unsecured refrigerator car door on a train operated by the Erie Railroad Company hit him in the head. [read post]
15 Aug 2018, 11:22 am
On July 27, 1934, Harry James Tompkins lost his arm, supposedly when an unsecured refrigerator car door on a train operated by the Erie Railroad Company hit him in the head. [read post]
7 Aug 2018, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
Frye, University of Kentucky College of Law, has posted The Ballad of Harry James Tompkins, which is forthcoming in the Akron Law Review:On July 27, 1934, Harry James Tompkins lost his arm, supposedly when an unsecured refrigerator car door on a train operated by the Erie Railroad Company hit him in the head. [read post]
8 Aug 2018, 8:32 am by Anthony Gaughan
On Monday I wrote about the legal legacy of Erie Railroad Company v Tompkins. [read post]
23 Mar 2015, 10:05 am by Mary Jane Wilmoth
Union Pacific Railroad Company, ARB Case No. 13-034 NWC Amicus brief in Powers v. [read post]
20 Apr 2010, 3:04 pm by Heidi Meinzer
In 1909, James and Kate White recorded an agreement and a deed conveying a right of way to Norfolk and Western Railway Company. [read post]
5 May 2016, 7:45 am by Laura Donohue
The controversy over the Second Bank of the United States, ostensibly settled in McCullough v. [read post]
3 Feb 2015, 6:50 am
Missouri Pacific Railroad Company (523 F.2d 1290), the Eighth Circuit criticized the railroad’s policy of refusing to hire persons with prior convictions. [read post]
17 Mar 2011, 11:10 am by John McFarland
The case is Railroad Commission of Texas and Pioneer Exploration, Ltd. v. [read post]
18 Jun 2017, 2:03 pm by scottgaille
From its earliest days it has been the East Coast’s team in southeast Texas, representing Northern brokerage houses, utilities, lumber companies and other absentee landlords, and railroads. [read post]
11 Mar 2011, 7:53 pm by Orin Kerr
“If James Watt made more law than Lord Coke,” says the author in a moment of unwarranted exhilaration, “then the Wright Brothers outdid James Watt” (p. v); it is hardly convincing proof of this to find the cases on air law referring to such old friends as Gibbons v. [read post]