The rules and the principles of the common law are formed from the cases decided in courts of common law. The unique nature of the evolution of the common law has long been the subject of study. Less frequently studied has been the impact of procedure upon the development of substantive law. This paper examines how the procedures applicable to the trial of a case can affect the substance of the resulting decision. The focus of the examination is the decision in Bell v Lever Bros [1932] AC 161. While the case has long been regarded as a leading, albeit confusing, contract law case it is also greatly concerned with the conduct of litigation. This paper argues that the substantive decision was largely determined by the civil procedure availabl...
This paper demonstrates that reasoning with statutes and reasoning with cases are actually one and t...
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the practical and theoretical issues encountered in A...
This subject has already been developed exhaustively and with great accuracy. Yet it is a subject in...
During much of the twentieth century, civil processes in the United States relied on a conceptual fr...
“No subject is more intimately connected with the history and development of our law than common law...
Anciently, regulations of pleading and practice were principally of judicial origin. Some were the r...
The present volume is intended to develop and disclose the rational basis for the main principles of...
Since the 1930s, the proportion of civil cases concluded at trial has declined from about 20% to bel...
In this article we report the results of three experiments involving the participation of 1800 subje...
There is great appeal to the notion that parties to a contract may provide in their agreement for ho...
The foundations for modern contract law were laid between 1670 and 1870. Rather than advancing a pur...
This text serves as an accessible introduction to the law of contract. The headings chosen for exami...
As late as the eighteenth century, ordinary jury trial at common law was a judge-dominated, lawyer-f...
Five hundred years ago, the common law of contract was without substance. It was form-procedure. Pla...
Since the last edition was completed at the end of 2004 most of the changes that have occurred in th...
This paper demonstrates that reasoning with statutes and reasoning with cases are actually one and t...
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the practical and theoretical issues encountered in A...
This subject has already been developed exhaustively and with great accuracy. Yet it is a subject in...
During much of the twentieth century, civil processes in the United States relied on a conceptual fr...
“No subject is more intimately connected with the history and development of our law than common law...
Anciently, regulations of pleading and practice were principally of judicial origin. Some were the r...
The present volume is intended to develop and disclose the rational basis for the main principles of...
Since the 1930s, the proportion of civil cases concluded at trial has declined from about 20% to bel...
In this article we report the results of three experiments involving the participation of 1800 subje...
There is great appeal to the notion that parties to a contract may provide in their agreement for ho...
The foundations for modern contract law were laid between 1670 and 1870. Rather than advancing a pur...
This text serves as an accessible introduction to the law of contract. The headings chosen for exami...
As late as the eighteenth century, ordinary jury trial at common law was a judge-dominated, lawyer-f...
Five hundred years ago, the common law of contract was without substance. It was form-procedure. Pla...
Since the last edition was completed at the end of 2004 most of the changes that have occurred in th...
This paper demonstrates that reasoning with statutes and reasoning with cases are actually one and t...
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the practical and theoretical issues encountered in A...
This subject has already been developed exhaustively and with great accuracy. Yet it is a subject in...