The article discusses the constitutional authority granting appellate courts in Louisiana the jurisdiction to review the record of a civil jury trial as well as to issue its own judgment contrary to the verdict of the jury. It presents several cases in which jury decisions were reversed including Brewer v. J.B. Hunt Transport, Inc., Menard v. Lafayette Insurance Company, and Fontenot v. Patterson
The article addresses Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure Article 966(G) about the protection of a def...
This Article argues that the administrative state’s most acute constitutional fault is its routine f...
Plaintiff\u27s cause of action arose under the federal Merchant Marine Act, which grants a right to ...
The article offers a look at the Louisiana Constitution and discusses the constitutional provision g...
The article offers information related to sanctions for frivolous civil appeals under Louisiana Code...
Federal district court judges have several mechanisms for controlling civil jury functions. One mech...
This Article contends that the predominant practice of federal courts of completely removing the jur...
In federal civil litigation, decisionmaking power is shared by juries, trial courts, and appellate c...
Appellant, a male, was convicted in a Louisiana state court of aggravated kidnapping. Prior to his t...
Appellate harmless error review, an early twentieth-century innovation prompted by concerns of effic...
That the Supreme Court of necessity largely leaves law development to the federal appellate courts, ...
The purpose of this article is to emphasize the Seventh Amendment\u27s reexamination clause and how ...
The article offers information on Louisiana Supreme Court case Boudreaux v. Cummings, focusing on pr...
Americans expect their constitutional rights to be respected by the federal, state, and local govern...
This Article seeks to assess the treatment of civil jury verdicts by the federal courts of appeals d...
The article addresses Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure Article 966(G) about the protection of a def...
This Article argues that the administrative state’s most acute constitutional fault is its routine f...
Plaintiff\u27s cause of action arose under the federal Merchant Marine Act, which grants a right to ...
The article offers a look at the Louisiana Constitution and discusses the constitutional provision g...
The article offers information related to sanctions for frivolous civil appeals under Louisiana Code...
Federal district court judges have several mechanisms for controlling civil jury functions. One mech...
This Article contends that the predominant practice of federal courts of completely removing the jur...
In federal civil litigation, decisionmaking power is shared by juries, trial courts, and appellate c...
Appellant, a male, was convicted in a Louisiana state court of aggravated kidnapping. Prior to his t...
Appellate harmless error review, an early twentieth-century innovation prompted by concerns of effic...
That the Supreme Court of necessity largely leaves law development to the federal appellate courts, ...
The purpose of this article is to emphasize the Seventh Amendment\u27s reexamination clause and how ...
The article offers information on Louisiana Supreme Court case Boudreaux v. Cummings, focusing on pr...
Americans expect their constitutional rights to be respected by the federal, state, and local govern...
This Article seeks to assess the treatment of civil jury verdicts by the federal courts of appeals d...
The article addresses Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure Article 966(G) about the protection of a def...
This Article argues that the administrative state’s most acute constitutional fault is its routine f...
Plaintiff\u27s cause of action arose under the federal Merchant Marine Act, which grants a right to ...