This Note argues that Congress should amend the APPA to require a judicial public interest determination prior to the entry of a voluntary dismissal in government-initiated civil antitrust actions. Part I of this Note briefly describes the APPA and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(1). Part II asserts that APPA procedures do not currently apply to voluntary dismissals under Rule 41(a)(1). Part III concludes that the purposes underlying the APPA and general policy considerations support the legislative extension of the Act to dismissals. Part IV responds to objections to this proposal. Finally, Part V presents a specific amendment to the APPA and examines recent congressional proposals
Section 1 of the Sherman Act makes it unlawful for persons to engage in a combination or conspiracy,...
The cost and time required by a treble damage action have traditionally acted as a strong brake to p...
Recent revisions of rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure removed certain restrictive inte...
For nearly eighty years the Department of Justice has disposed of civil antitrust suits through sett...
In the wake of this uncertainty, this Note analyzes the proper scope of judicial review of consent d...
The genius of the Sherman Act has been said to lie in its generality and adaptability. Thus the act ...
Few fields of law have experienced a more dramatic pace of development in recent years than has that...
The author analyzes the conceptual bases of two rules applied in antitrust litigation: the first all...
This Note will attempt to determine the correct standard of review for all modifications of existing...
This comment will deal with a review of the history, nature, and use of the consent decree, an analy...
Certification of Rule 23(b)(3) antitrust class actions has consumed large amounts of legal energy, w...
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a) and its state law counterparts permit, under certain circumsta...
This Note examines the contribution controversy from an antitrust policy perspective. Part I summari...
This Note analyses the Fifth Circuit’s decision in United States ex rel Varva v. Kellogg Brown & Roo...
Several recent developments have shifted the attention of legal minds to an area of administrative l...
Section 1 of the Sherman Act makes it unlawful for persons to engage in a combination or conspiracy,...
The cost and time required by a treble damage action have traditionally acted as a strong brake to p...
Recent revisions of rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure removed certain restrictive inte...
For nearly eighty years the Department of Justice has disposed of civil antitrust suits through sett...
In the wake of this uncertainty, this Note analyzes the proper scope of judicial review of consent d...
The genius of the Sherman Act has been said to lie in its generality and adaptability. Thus the act ...
Few fields of law have experienced a more dramatic pace of development in recent years than has that...
The author analyzes the conceptual bases of two rules applied in antitrust litigation: the first all...
This Note will attempt to determine the correct standard of review for all modifications of existing...
This comment will deal with a review of the history, nature, and use of the consent decree, an analy...
Certification of Rule 23(b)(3) antitrust class actions has consumed large amounts of legal energy, w...
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a) and its state law counterparts permit, under certain circumsta...
This Note examines the contribution controversy from an antitrust policy perspective. Part I summari...
This Note analyses the Fifth Circuit’s decision in United States ex rel Varva v. Kellogg Brown & Roo...
Several recent developments have shifted the attention of legal minds to an area of administrative l...
Section 1 of the Sherman Act makes it unlawful for persons to engage in a combination or conspiracy,...
The cost and time required by a treble damage action have traditionally acted as a strong brake to p...
Recent revisions of rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure removed certain restrictive inte...