It is an interesting speculation whether an able court does not tend naturally because of its own high level of efficiency to require of others a greater facility in matters of procedure than may reasonably or practically be expected. The New York Court of Appeals now furnishes an occasion for such a speculation. That able tribunal has recently gone far to reEstablish the requirement that the pleader must have and stick to one theory of his cause of action. It has stated, in reversing a judgment because of lack of a jury trial, that the inherent and fundamental difference between actions at law and suits in equity cannot be ignored, coupling with this some encomiums upon the necessity of exact pleading which have a distinctly antiquarian ...
One of the most important changes of the New York Code of Pleading and Practice of 1848, so at least...
The original New York Code of Civil Procedure, which proposed to bring about a fusion of common law ...
This Note argues that the Seventh Amendment\u27s jury trial right does not include litigants in clas...
It is an interesting speculation whether an able court does not tend naturally because of its own hi...
Perhaps a single regret may accompany the passing of common law pleading :--that there also passed t...
This article addresses the issue of the preclusion of jury trials in actions which contemplate both ...
One of the greatest obstacles to the full success of the code reform of pleading in this country has...
In 1947 the New York Judicial Council, after careful consideration, tabled a proposal submitted to i...
The inherent and fundamental difference between actions at law and suits in equity cannot be ignored...
In working out the details of the great pleading reform of 1848, the New York Commissioners on Prac...
Defendant held an insurance policy written by plaintiff which by its terms covered a hangar against ...
The civil jury trial is uniquely American. Though many countries utilize a jury system for conductin...
It would seem a truism to state that the object of courts of justice is to do justice between the pa...
Litigants in Missouri have had their rights to a trial by jury expanded following the Missouri Supre...
When the application of res judicata involves factual disputes, the jury must be the judicial actor ...
One of the most important changes of the New York Code of Pleading and Practice of 1848, so at least...
The original New York Code of Civil Procedure, which proposed to bring about a fusion of common law ...
This Note argues that the Seventh Amendment\u27s jury trial right does not include litigants in clas...
It is an interesting speculation whether an able court does not tend naturally because of its own hi...
Perhaps a single regret may accompany the passing of common law pleading :--that there also passed t...
This article addresses the issue of the preclusion of jury trials in actions which contemplate both ...
One of the greatest obstacles to the full success of the code reform of pleading in this country has...
In 1947 the New York Judicial Council, after careful consideration, tabled a proposal submitted to i...
The inherent and fundamental difference between actions at law and suits in equity cannot be ignored...
In working out the details of the great pleading reform of 1848, the New York Commissioners on Prac...
Defendant held an insurance policy written by plaintiff which by its terms covered a hangar against ...
The civil jury trial is uniquely American. Though many countries utilize a jury system for conductin...
It would seem a truism to state that the object of courts of justice is to do justice between the pa...
Litigants in Missouri have had their rights to a trial by jury expanded following the Missouri Supre...
When the application of res judicata involves factual disputes, the jury must be the judicial actor ...
One of the most important changes of the New York Code of Pleading and Practice of 1848, so at least...
The original New York Code of Civil Procedure, which proposed to bring about a fusion of common law ...
This Note argues that the Seventh Amendment\u27s jury trial right does not include litigants in clas...