Search for: "People v. Williams (1973)" Results 41 - 60 of 209
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20 Dec 2021, 9:00 pm by Austin Sarat
Austin Sarat is the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College. [read post]
1 Dec 2021, 8:22 pm by Samuel Bray
He was the Supreme Court's junior member when Roe v. [read post]
24 Jul 2021, 11:51 am by admin
”[6] Although any actual apportionment, upon which reasonable people can disagree, must be made by the trier of fact, whether the plaintiff’s harm is apportionable is a question for the court.[7] Judicial Applications of Apportionment Principles Some of the earliest cases apportioning property damages involved the worrying and killing of sheep by dogs belonging to two or more persons. [read post]
16 May 2021, 9:01 pm by Austin Sarat
Payne is well known among those on death row in the United States because he was the plaintiff in an infamous Supreme Court case, Payne v. [read post]
15 Dec 2020, 8:30 am by Eugene Volokh
First, from the Marietta Daily Journal (Ross Williams), describing the basis for the $1.5 million verdict: Alpha OB/GYN … for years the target of sign-waving protesters, and was even the victim of arson in 2012. [read post]
5 Nov 2020, 6:02 am by Eugene Volokh
Mash (1973) in Purifoy, 34 Mich App 318, a ruling that was reaffirmed in People v Mash, 45 Mich App 459; 206 NW2d 767 (1973) and more recently in People v. [read post]
18 Sep 2020, 6:26 pm by Amy Howe
Her first argument came in 1973, in the case of Sharron Frontiero, an Air Force lieutenant who challenged a federal benefits law that treated married female members of the armed forces less favorably than their male counterparts. [read post]
1 May 2020, 12:32 pm by Quinta Jurecic, Benjamin Wittes
His claim that the entire case should be dismissed because of “outrageous government conduct” stems from a 1973 Supreme Court case, U.S. v. [read post]
13 Jan 2020, 3:00 am by Jack Sharman
Two that come to mind, for example, are Evan Thomas’s The Man To See (1992) (about Edward Bennett Williams) and Louis Nizer’s  My Life In Court (1961). [read post]