Posts tagged with: "1872" Results 1 - 20 of 865
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4 Apr 2024, 10:01 pm by rhapsodyinbooks
In 1872 at the age of sixteen, Washington enrolled at the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute, in Hampton, Virginia. [read post]
12 Mar 2024, 10:47 am by Robin Frazer Clark
Justices, citing anti-abortion language in the Alabama Constitution, ruled that an 1872 state law allowing parents to sue over the death of a minor child “applies to all unborn children, regardless of their location. [read post]
5 Mar 2024, 8:53 am by Cari Rincker
First, they claimed that the majority expanded the meaning of child under the Wrongful Death Act beyond what it meant at the time it was enacted in 1872. [read post]
4 Mar 2024, 12:47 pm
 Pix credit here The majority’s choice of a different path leaves the remaining Justices with a choice of how to respond. [read post]
27 Feb 2024, 11:58 am by Neil Schoenherr
“The opinion asserted that the text of the wrongful death statute, enacted in 1872 — well before the age of assisted reproductive technology — compels this result and that, even if it did not, a state constitutional amendment protecting the ‘sanctity of unborn life’ requires the statute to be read that way,” said Susan Appleton, the Lemma Barkeloo & Phoebe Couzins Professor of Law. [read post]
24 Feb 2024, 7:57 am by Michael C. Dorf
Supreme Court said as much in 1872: "The paramount destiny and mission of woman are to fulfill the noble and benign offices of wife and mother. [read post]
22 Feb 2024, 2:04 pm by Josh Blackman
& Pol'y Rev. 53, 66 & n.49, 98 & n.207 (1999); see also Timothy Farrar, Manual of the Constitution of the United States of America 436 (Boston, Little, Brown, & Co. 3d ed. rev. 1872) ("The general power of impeachment and trial may extend to others besides civil officers, as military or naval officers, or even persons not in office, and to other offences than those expressly requiring a judgment of removal from office . . . . [read post]
22 Feb 2024, 11:51 am by Joelle Boxer
It cites 100 years of common law after 1872 holding that claims on behalf of injured, unborn children were “mere legal fiction. [read post]
20 Feb 2024, 3:50 pm by lennyesq
Justices, citing anti-abortion language in the Alabama Constitution, ruled that an 1872 state law allowing parents to sue over the death of a minor child “applies to all unborn children, regardless of their location. [read post]
19 Feb 2024, 4:05 am by Howard Friedman
 Justice Mendheim filed an opinion concurring in the result, saying in part:In my judgment, the main opinion's view that the legal conclusion is "clear" and "black-letter law" is problematic because when the Wrongful Death of a Minor Act was first enacted in 1872, and for 100 years thereafter, IVF was not even a scientific possibility....Ultimately ... we must be guided by the language provided in the Wrongful Death of a Minor Act and the manner in which our… [read post]
15 Feb 2024, 4:33 am by Mark Graber
  On the rare occasion before 1872 when disqualified persons obtained federal elected offices, states moved to disqualify without waiting for federal action. [read post]
14 Feb 2024, 3:05 pm by Marty Lederman
 This post and the next are follow-ups to my collection of posts on Trump v. [read post]
12 Feb 2024, 7:39 pm by Mark Graber
  From 1868 to 1872, the period in which Section Three was implemented by the states, Republicans, many of whom were former enslaved persons, controlled southern state governments. [read post]
10 Feb 2024, 12:01 pm by Yosi Yahoudai
”  That was in 1872, when Japan adopted the Gregorian calendar and other Western notions in an attempt to modernize the country, according to the National Diet Library of Japan. [read post]
9 Feb 2024, 3:03 am by Will Baude
  (Or, as actually happened in 1872, what if a presidential candidate has died between election day and the day prescribed by law for votes of electors to be counted? [read post]
7 Feb 2024, 6:25 pm by Marty Lederman
     That one or both “amnesty” laws Congress enacted in 1872 and 1898 are prospective in operation and that therefore Section 3 has no effect. [read post]