Search for: "Willard v. Willard" Results 1 - 20 of 143
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
21 Apr 2021, 6:40 am by Daily Record Staff
Criminal law — Sufficiency of evidence — Murder and arson A jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City convicted appellant, Willard Turner, of first-degree murder, kidnapping, conspiracy to commit kidnapping, false imprisonment, conspiracy to commit false imprisonment, and second-degree arson. [read post]
25 Jul 2017, 7:33 am
For many years, Willard Scott would announce each morning those lucky folks who'd hit the 100 year marker in life. [read post]
29 Sep 2020, 12:35 pm by Shepherd Smith Edwards & Kantas, LLP
The second customer case, filed in July, names the United Development Funding V real estate investment trust (UDF V REIT). [read post]
8 Apr 2020, 6:07 am
Age discrimination can be proved by statements by a fired employee's supervisors referring to him as "grandpa," "dinosaur," "over-the-hill," "old and fat" and asking when he was going to retire, a federal appeals court ruled in Willard v. [read post]
2 Mar 2018, 1:49 pm by Daily Record Staff
Appellant’s principal argument is that the standard articulated by this Court in Stidham v. ... [read post]
28 Jan 2014, 7:00 am by Alfred Brophy
 The imagery originates with Willard Hurst's 1956 book Law and the Conditions of Freedom in the Nineteenth-Century United States, though as John points out around the turn of the twentieth century Albert V. [read post]
24 Apr 2022, 9:30 pm by ernst
  Here's the TOC: Editor’s Note: The Docket Forum on Hendrik Hartog’s “Four Fragments on Doing Legal History, Or Thinking With and Against Willard Hurst”Risa Goluboff: Response to Dirk Hartog’s “Four Fragments” In a Flow Chart and Three Venn DiagramsMark V. [read post]
31 Oct 2022, 3:23 am
The September-October 2022 issue of The Trademark Reporter [pdf here], as described by Willard Knox, Editor-in-Chief, "offers our readers an article mapping out how to navigate the doctrine of foreign equivalents and a commentary proposing a reinvention of the Rogers v. [read post]