The Federal Tort Claims Act is a partial waiver of sovereign immunity. In Rayonier, Incorporated v. United States, the United States Supreme Court stated: The purpose of the Federal Tort Claims Act was to waive the government\u27s traditional all encompassing immunity from tort action and to establish novel and unprecedented governmental liability. This legislation does not create a new cause of action, but merely means that the United States is liable for certain negligent acts in the same manner as is anyone else
As the Supreme Court weakens the Bivens constitutional tort cause of action and federal officers avo...
[A]lthough the legislative history of the FTCA lends great support for the argument that the doctrin...
The plaintiff who seeks to maintain an action in tort against a federal employee has basically two c...
The Federal Tort Claims Act is a partial waiver of sovereign immunity. In Rayonier, Incorporated v. ...
When it enacted the Federal Tort Claims Act Congress waived the United States’ sovereign immunity fo...
Recent decisions of the Court interpreting the Federal Tort Claims Act, including Laird v. Nelms and...
Recent decisions of the Court interpreting the Federal Tort Claims Act, including Laird v. Nelms and...
The enactment of the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) on August 2, 1946, provided the most comprehensi...
When it enacted the Federal Tort Claims Act Congress waived the United States’ sovereign immunity fo...
The doctrine of sovereign immunity generally bars suits against the federal government. The Federal ...
The doctrine of the immunity of the sovereign in tort has long been the subject of attack by statesm...
The doctrine of the immunity of the sovereign in tort has long been the subject of attack by statesm...
In this article, I argue that state sovereign and official immunities, insofar as they bar recovery ...
To attempt a brief summary of the Federal Tort Claims Act may be likened to an attempt to explain at...
As the Supreme Court weakens the Bivens constitutional tort cause of action and federal officers avo...
As the Supreme Court weakens the Bivens constitutional tort cause of action and federal officers avo...
[A]lthough the legislative history of the FTCA lends great support for the argument that the doctrin...
The plaintiff who seeks to maintain an action in tort against a federal employee has basically two c...
The Federal Tort Claims Act is a partial waiver of sovereign immunity. In Rayonier, Incorporated v. ...
When it enacted the Federal Tort Claims Act Congress waived the United States’ sovereign immunity fo...
Recent decisions of the Court interpreting the Federal Tort Claims Act, including Laird v. Nelms and...
Recent decisions of the Court interpreting the Federal Tort Claims Act, including Laird v. Nelms and...
The enactment of the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) on August 2, 1946, provided the most comprehensi...
When it enacted the Federal Tort Claims Act Congress waived the United States’ sovereign immunity fo...
The doctrine of sovereign immunity generally bars suits against the federal government. The Federal ...
The doctrine of the immunity of the sovereign in tort has long been the subject of attack by statesm...
The doctrine of the immunity of the sovereign in tort has long been the subject of attack by statesm...
In this article, I argue that state sovereign and official immunities, insofar as they bar recovery ...
To attempt a brief summary of the Federal Tort Claims Act may be likened to an attempt to explain at...
As the Supreme Court weakens the Bivens constitutional tort cause of action and federal officers avo...
As the Supreme Court weakens the Bivens constitutional tort cause of action and federal officers avo...
[A]lthough the legislative history of the FTCA lends great support for the argument that the doctrin...
The plaintiff who seeks to maintain an action in tort against a federal employee has basically two c...