When the application of res judicata involves factual disputes, the jury must be the judicial actor to resolve these discrepancies. The fact-law distinction, which gives questions of fact to the jury and questions of law to the judge, has guided American courts for hundreds of years. From the time of the adoption of the Seventh Amendment until the end of the nineteenth century, courts have viewed res judicata disputes as factual determinations within the province of the jury.The migration from question of fact to question of law in the twentieth century lacked any proffered legal justification, and even as the courts proclaimed res judicata as distinctively within the judge’s dominion, they still acknowledged the factual nature of the res j...
Juries must answer to questions of fact and judges to questions of law. This is the fundamental maxi...
Recent scholarship on constitutional decision rules distinguishes courts from other constitutional d...
Ever since In re Winship in 1970, it is well settled that the Due Process Clause requires a jury to ...
When the application of res judicata involves factual disputes, the jury must be the judicial actor ...
Applying state substantive law, the Fourth Circuit held that a prior adjudication of negligence in a...
The principle of res judicata as applied to civil litigation is very familiar. Likewise well known i...
In a series of decisions over the last decade, the Supreme Court has reconsidered an aspect of the S...
Plaintiff sued defendant in a federal district court to foreclose a mortgage lien alleged to exist o...
In Mu\u27Min v. Virginia, the United States Supreme Court held a defendant has no right to ask juror...
During the 2005 survey year, federal courts in the Second Circuit decided a number of important res ...
This article explores questions related to the emergence of the jury\u27s new representative functio...
The standard division of labor at trial is that jurors find facts and judges interpret statutes. But...
The newly reconstituted Supreme Court of the United States has become the center of an earnest contr...
(the) Supreme Court\u27s Sixth and Seventh Amendment jurisprudence has not created a more expansive ...
During the last forty years, the increasing complexity of problems in the law and the merger of law ...
Juries must answer to questions of fact and judges to questions of law. This is the fundamental maxi...
Recent scholarship on constitutional decision rules distinguishes courts from other constitutional d...
Ever since In re Winship in 1970, it is well settled that the Due Process Clause requires a jury to ...
When the application of res judicata involves factual disputes, the jury must be the judicial actor ...
Applying state substantive law, the Fourth Circuit held that a prior adjudication of negligence in a...
The principle of res judicata as applied to civil litigation is very familiar. Likewise well known i...
In a series of decisions over the last decade, the Supreme Court has reconsidered an aspect of the S...
Plaintiff sued defendant in a federal district court to foreclose a mortgage lien alleged to exist o...
In Mu\u27Min v. Virginia, the United States Supreme Court held a defendant has no right to ask juror...
During the 2005 survey year, federal courts in the Second Circuit decided a number of important res ...
This article explores questions related to the emergence of the jury\u27s new representative functio...
The standard division of labor at trial is that jurors find facts and judges interpret statutes. But...
The newly reconstituted Supreme Court of the United States has become the center of an earnest contr...
(the) Supreme Court\u27s Sixth and Seventh Amendment jurisprudence has not created a more expansive ...
During the last forty years, the increasing complexity of problems in the law and the merger of law ...
Juries must answer to questions of fact and judges to questions of law. This is the fundamental maxi...
Recent scholarship on constitutional decision rules distinguishes courts from other constitutional d...
Ever since In re Winship in 1970, it is well settled that the Due Process Clause requires a jury to ...