With pleasure I responded to the invitation of the Editors to participate in a timely symposium on the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and their effect in state and federal procedure. Because these rules have been so brilliantly successful in their own original jurisdiction; because, too, they are having an important and an abiding effect upon state practice through the union, such a symposium, viewed as both a place of rest for a backward look and a point of departure for the future, is most appropriate. My own writings have been, alas, too numerous to justify me in long further excursions at the moment. Hence I trust my contribution will be understandingly brief. But a quick survey of the considerable and constantly increasing stimulus t...
It is impossible, without unduly extending the length of this article, to discuss in detail each par...
When twenty-one lawyers and judges bring to fruition in the short space of eight months a task so ex...
In conformity with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, each district court may specify its own spe...
With pleasure I responded to the invitation of the Editors to participate in a timely symposium on t...
Two decades of lively experience under the federal civil rules provide adequate perspective for both...
The amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, adopted by the Supreme Court of the United S...
In this article we present a new survey of the civil procedures of the fifty states and the District...
In this article we present a new survey of the civil procedures of the fifty states and the District...
In this article we present a new survey of the civil procedures of the fifty states and the District...
In 1938, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were adopted. Their adoption represented a triumph of ...
When twenty-one lawyers and judges bring to fruition in the short space of eight months a task so ex...
It is impossible, without unduly extending the length of this article, to discuss in detail each par...
Response to Prof. John B. Oakley\u27s writings comparing state court procedural rules with the Feder...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, whatever criticisms wemight have of their details, have been a...
It is impossible, without unduly extending the length of this article, to discuss in detail each par...
It is impossible, without unduly extending the length of this article, to discuss in detail each par...
When twenty-one lawyers and judges bring to fruition in the short space of eight months a task so ex...
In conformity with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, each district court may specify its own spe...
With pleasure I responded to the invitation of the Editors to participate in a timely symposium on t...
Two decades of lively experience under the federal civil rules provide adequate perspective for both...
The amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, adopted by the Supreme Court of the United S...
In this article we present a new survey of the civil procedures of the fifty states and the District...
In this article we present a new survey of the civil procedures of the fifty states and the District...
In this article we present a new survey of the civil procedures of the fifty states and the District...
In 1938, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were adopted. Their adoption represented a triumph of ...
When twenty-one lawyers and judges bring to fruition in the short space of eight months a task so ex...
It is impossible, without unduly extending the length of this article, to discuss in detail each par...
Response to Prof. John B. Oakley\u27s writings comparing state court procedural rules with the Feder...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, whatever criticisms wemight have of their details, have been a...
It is impossible, without unduly extending the length of this article, to discuss in detail each par...
It is impossible, without unduly extending the length of this article, to discuss in detail each par...
When twenty-one lawyers and judges bring to fruition in the short space of eight months a task so ex...
In conformity with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, each district court may specify its own spe...