The majority opinion in the Illinois Supreme Court held that if a change was to be made, the task was for the legislature, not the court. The five in the majority were not ready to deliver an opinion like that in MacPherson, Henningsen, Greenman.\u27 If they had, there is real reason to believe that a similar consequence of an immediate and substantial judicial following would have developed. Without saying so, they seemed to be influenced by the thought that they would be complete pioneers in uncharted territory, with no precedents to rely upon or to interpret. Are there any judicial precedents? Yes--quite a number--all relevant, but in varying degrees and in differing respects. Some courts have adopted a form of comparative negligence. Th...
The law and economics literature has provided an interest group model to explain the timing of the s...
A recent line of Illinois Supreme Court decisions has announced a new clearly erroneous standard o...
The Marks doctrine was established by the Supreme Court as an earnest attempt to divine binding prec...
Believing that the holdings and opinions in the case of Maki v. Frelkare significant legal developme...
My first reaction to the performance of the Illinois Appellate Court in Maki v. Frelk was to recall ...
How far can you stretch precedent before it breaks? The 2002 Term suggests that some Justices seem t...
This Comment contends that under limited circumstances lower courts may refuse to follow authoritati...
It is the purpose of this comment to attempt to determine and evaluate just what the court\u27s role...
In American Motorcycle v. Superior Court, the California Supreme Court failed to extend the pure s...
The rule of stare decisis creates a presumption that a court’s ruling on a legal question remains bi...
Perhaps the principal shortcoming of constitutional adjudication in the Supreme Court of the United ...
In Rush v. Savchuk, the Supreme Court struck down the controversial Seider doctrine, which permitted...
The common law view of contributory negligence theoretically still obtains in most jurisdictions. Th...
In the case of Wilfong v. Batdorf the Ohio Supreme Court reexamined the issue of the retroactive app...
There were over forty appellate decisions during the past year in the field of Torts. All but about ...
The law and economics literature has provided an interest group model to explain the timing of the s...
A recent line of Illinois Supreme Court decisions has announced a new clearly erroneous standard o...
The Marks doctrine was established by the Supreme Court as an earnest attempt to divine binding prec...
Believing that the holdings and opinions in the case of Maki v. Frelkare significant legal developme...
My first reaction to the performance of the Illinois Appellate Court in Maki v. Frelk was to recall ...
How far can you stretch precedent before it breaks? The 2002 Term suggests that some Justices seem t...
This Comment contends that under limited circumstances lower courts may refuse to follow authoritati...
It is the purpose of this comment to attempt to determine and evaluate just what the court\u27s role...
In American Motorcycle v. Superior Court, the California Supreme Court failed to extend the pure s...
The rule of stare decisis creates a presumption that a court’s ruling on a legal question remains bi...
Perhaps the principal shortcoming of constitutional adjudication in the Supreme Court of the United ...
In Rush v. Savchuk, the Supreme Court struck down the controversial Seider doctrine, which permitted...
The common law view of contributory negligence theoretically still obtains in most jurisdictions. Th...
In the case of Wilfong v. Batdorf the Ohio Supreme Court reexamined the issue of the retroactive app...
There were over forty appellate decisions during the past year in the field of Torts. All but about ...
The law and economics literature has provided an interest group model to explain the timing of the s...
A recent line of Illinois Supreme Court decisions has announced a new clearly erroneous standard o...
The Marks doctrine was established by the Supreme Court as an earnest attempt to divine binding prec...