Unlike most states in America, Ohio has a unique system of punishing minor misdemeanors and ordinance violations through municipal institutions called mayor’s courts. In 2017, Ohio had 295 of these courts, and they heard nearly 300,000 cases. But these are not normal courts. Ohio’s mayor’s courts do not conduct ability to pay hearings and can jail defendants who fail to pay court fines. With the author’s original research into Ohio’s mayor’s courts, this Note argues that these institutions can function like modern-day debtor’s prisons and violate indigent defendants’ constitutional right to Due Process. Ultimately, this Note proposes a model bill for the Ohio legislature that promotes more oversight and promises to save the constitutionalit...
Ohio is among the twenty-two states that have no enabling legislation for development impact fees. B...
Whether in the case of predatory lending or other issues that will differ from location to location,...
This Article argues for a new and unexpected mechanism of judicial accountability: suing courts. Cur...
This thesis provides a primer on mayor’s courts in Ohio, assesses common claims about the problems t...
Ohio has only briefly addressed the entrance of Bell Atlantic onto the pleading stage, and, thus far...
The Home Rule Amendment to Ohio’s Constitution vest with municipalities the power to legislate on is...
This review of §1983 litigation in the Ohio courts has three principal goals. First, it provides an ...
Ohio has only briefly addressed the entrance of Bell Atlantic onto the pleading stage, and, thus far...
This review of §1983 litigation in the Ohio courts has three principal goals. First, it provides an ...
Ohio has been accepting of prenuptial agreements since its landmark decision in Gross v. Gross in 19...
Renting is on the rise, with all households seeing an increase in the prevalence of renting a home v...
Mandate to Common Pleas Court, Cuyahoga County, to proceed without delay to carry out its judgment i...
This Note is principally concerned with those takings that arise from the State\u27s exercise of emi...
In a watershed 2015 referendum, Ohioans decisively approved a state constitutional amendment that pr...
This Note argues that Ohio’s home-rule principles foster a regional “race to the bottom and proposes...
Ohio is among the twenty-two states that have no enabling legislation for development impact fees. B...
Whether in the case of predatory lending or other issues that will differ from location to location,...
This Article argues for a new and unexpected mechanism of judicial accountability: suing courts. Cur...
This thesis provides a primer on mayor’s courts in Ohio, assesses common claims about the problems t...
Ohio has only briefly addressed the entrance of Bell Atlantic onto the pleading stage, and, thus far...
The Home Rule Amendment to Ohio’s Constitution vest with municipalities the power to legislate on is...
This review of §1983 litigation in the Ohio courts has three principal goals. First, it provides an ...
Ohio has only briefly addressed the entrance of Bell Atlantic onto the pleading stage, and, thus far...
This review of §1983 litigation in the Ohio courts has three principal goals. First, it provides an ...
Ohio has been accepting of prenuptial agreements since its landmark decision in Gross v. Gross in 19...
Renting is on the rise, with all households seeing an increase in the prevalence of renting a home v...
Mandate to Common Pleas Court, Cuyahoga County, to proceed without delay to carry out its judgment i...
This Note is principally concerned with those takings that arise from the State\u27s exercise of emi...
In a watershed 2015 referendum, Ohioans decisively approved a state constitutional amendment that pr...
This Note argues that Ohio’s home-rule principles foster a regional “race to the bottom and proposes...
Ohio is among the twenty-two states that have no enabling legislation for development impact fees. B...
Whether in the case of predatory lending or other issues that will differ from location to location,...
This Article argues for a new and unexpected mechanism of judicial accountability: suing courts. Cur...