Municipal government in the United States is big business. In 1946, the 397 cities having a population of 25,000 or more spent a total of nearly 3 billion dollars for general governmental expenditures. In 1947 the total increased by 17 per cent to $3,477,000,000. Of that amount, 2½ billion were actual operational expenses for such activities as public safety, public health, sanitation, hospitals, local street and highway maintenance, and schools. Since the figures do not include the amounts expended in connection with municipal water works or municipal street railways, they lend weight to the assertion that our municipal governments are today engaged in a variety of activities which, in the aggregate, are of considerable magnitude
Plaintiff\u27s decedent was killed by a fall down the elevator shaft of a building owned and maintai...
Municipal regulation of streets and sidewalks is regularly authorized under state law. It must, howe...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Monroe v. Pape excluding municipalities as proper defendants in a...
The fundamental principle in the law of municipal liability under § 1983 is that municipalities may ...
There is hardly a legal doctrine so universally criticized as municipal tort immunity, which is at t...
According to a well-established common law rule, a municipal corporation is immune to tort liability...
Plaintiff sued the Town of Cocoa Beach for damages for the alleged wrongful death of her husband. Pl...
Municipal Corporations: Liability of Counties for Negligent Acts and Omissions of Their Employees an...
Actions alleging municipal tort liability for negligent administration of building and zoning codes ...
Although the law is not altogether free from doubt on the subject of municipal liability for exempla...
At the time when the Federal Constitution was adopted, municipal government in America was a very si...
Brown v. Board of Trustees of Town of Hamplonburg, School District 4, 303 N. Y. 484 104 N. E. 2d 866...
In preparing this bulletin an examination has been made of all the published opinions of Tennessee. ...
A statute allowed any city to set aside a certain amount annually from the general tax fund, which m...
Probably no function of a municipal corporation is more “governmental in character than the care of...
Plaintiff\u27s decedent was killed by a fall down the elevator shaft of a building owned and maintai...
Municipal regulation of streets and sidewalks is regularly authorized under state law. It must, howe...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Monroe v. Pape excluding municipalities as proper defendants in a...
The fundamental principle in the law of municipal liability under § 1983 is that municipalities may ...
There is hardly a legal doctrine so universally criticized as municipal tort immunity, which is at t...
According to a well-established common law rule, a municipal corporation is immune to tort liability...
Plaintiff sued the Town of Cocoa Beach for damages for the alleged wrongful death of her husband. Pl...
Municipal Corporations: Liability of Counties for Negligent Acts and Omissions of Their Employees an...
Actions alleging municipal tort liability for negligent administration of building and zoning codes ...
Although the law is not altogether free from doubt on the subject of municipal liability for exempla...
At the time when the Federal Constitution was adopted, municipal government in America was a very si...
Brown v. Board of Trustees of Town of Hamplonburg, School District 4, 303 N. Y. 484 104 N. E. 2d 866...
In preparing this bulletin an examination has been made of all the published opinions of Tennessee. ...
A statute allowed any city to set aside a certain amount annually from the general tax fund, which m...
Probably no function of a municipal corporation is more “governmental in character than the care of...
Plaintiff\u27s decedent was killed by a fall down the elevator shaft of a building owned and maintai...
Municipal regulation of streets and sidewalks is regularly authorized under state law. It must, howe...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Monroe v. Pape excluding municipalities as proper defendants in a...