While it is now well settled that a corporation has the power to acquire and hold real estate, this power may be limited by the charter creating the corporation, by legislative enactments of a general nature, or by specific constitutional provisions. When such a limitation is imposed by constitution, a problem of construction arises in interpreting it in a workable way after the social conditions motivating it have changed or disappeared
The malignant decision in the Dartmouth College case fathered the passage of reserved-power statut...
The present purpose is to inquire whether, in the matter of the regulation of property rights and of...
The central theme of this study comprises the judicial and legislative rules developed to restrict a...
Defendant, a Michigan corporation, was incorporated in 1923 for a term of thirty years, the maximum ...
An ordinance of the city of Detroit regulated trailer camps in part by requiring the consent of sixt...
Excepting a small area set aside for business purposes, the deeds conveying more than 1300 lots in t...
Many years ago a subdivision in Detroit was platted, with recorded building restrictions. When ready...
Few questions have been more prolific of litigation than those relating to the legal status of forei...
It is the purpose of this comment to examine the legal consequences produced when the tranquility of...
Plaintiffs were the owners of two lots in a subdivision originally owned by a real estate developmen...
The charter and a by-law of the plaintiff corporation contained provisions which stipulated that bef...
The defendant, a Michigan corporation, adopted a constitution (by-laws) which contained the follow...
ln 1945 appellant corporation was dissolved. Under a state statute, its officers became trustees, wi...
A declaratory judgment proceeding was brought by persons owning property within a small-unit residen...
The restrictive covenant is a device by which property owners can gain some degree of assurance that...
The malignant decision in the Dartmouth College case fathered the passage of reserved-power statut...
The present purpose is to inquire whether, in the matter of the regulation of property rights and of...
The central theme of this study comprises the judicial and legislative rules developed to restrict a...
Defendant, a Michigan corporation, was incorporated in 1923 for a term of thirty years, the maximum ...
An ordinance of the city of Detroit regulated trailer camps in part by requiring the consent of sixt...
Excepting a small area set aside for business purposes, the deeds conveying more than 1300 lots in t...
Many years ago a subdivision in Detroit was platted, with recorded building restrictions. When ready...
Few questions have been more prolific of litigation than those relating to the legal status of forei...
It is the purpose of this comment to examine the legal consequences produced when the tranquility of...
Plaintiffs were the owners of two lots in a subdivision originally owned by a real estate developmen...
The charter and a by-law of the plaintiff corporation contained provisions which stipulated that bef...
The defendant, a Michigan corporation, adopted a constitution (by-laws) which contained the follow...
ln 1945 appellant corporation was dissolved. Under a state statute, its officers became trustees, wi...
A declaratory judgment proceeding was brought by persons owning property within a small-unit residen...
The restrictive covenant is a device by which property owners can gain some degree of assurance that...
The malignant decision in the Dartmouth College case fathered the passage of reserved-power statut...
The present purpose is to inquire whether, in the matter of the regulation of property rights and of...
The central theme of this study comprises the judicial and legislative rules developed to restrict a...