A question of considerable import which has arisen time and again in recent years, particularly since the enactment of the various federal regulatory acts within the past decade, is whether the business of insurance is commerce. Although not a new question, and by no means unanswered by the courts, it has been a subject of recent reconsideration and in all probability will be reviewed by the United States Supreme Court
This article was presented at a symposium entitled “Public and Private: Are the Boundaries in Tran...
This Article presents both historical and empirical evidence to support the view that the Supreme Co...
This is the author's version of a chapter subsequently published as Flanagan, A. (2012). E-Commerce:...
The 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act provides that federal legislation generally, including the antitrust ...
The California Insurance Code forbids a person to act as agent for an insurance company until a lice...
The past fifteen years have seen extensive examination of the process of regulation of the insurance...
Plaintiff, a corporation, advertised that any person who bought goods from certain selected stores w...
Petitioner, the FTC, issued cease and desist orders prohibiting respondent health and accident insur...
This Article applies the method of text and principle to an important problem in constitutional inte...
In the case of International Text-book Company v. Pigg, Advance Sheets May 1, 1910 (30 Sup. Ct. 481)...
Insurance law in the eighteenth century is often seen as a perfect illustration of the way commercia...
For over a century, there has been a continuing controversy concerning state versus federal regulati...
Any substantial inquiry into the functioning of the insurance commissioner in American society poses...
The sole thesis of this paper is that competition among insurers, tempered by state supervision of t...
The history of commercial law has often been written as if it were merely a product of the common la...
This article was presented at a symposium entitled “Public and Private: Are the Boundaries in Tran...
This Article presents both historical and empirical evidence to support the view that the Supreme Co...
This is the author's version of a chapter subsequently published as Flanagan, A. (2012). E-Commerce:...
The 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act provides that federal legislation generally, including the antitrust ...
The California Insurance Code forbids a person to act as agent for an insurance company until a lice...
The past fifteen years have seen extensive examination of the process of regulation of the insurance...
Plaintiff, a corporation, advertised that any person who bought goods from certain selected stores w...
Petitioner, the FTC, issued cease and desist orders prohibiting respondent health and accident insur...
This Article applies the method of text and principle to an important problem in constitutional inte...
In the case of International Text-book Company v. Pigg, Advance Sheets May 1, 1910 (30 Sup. Ct. 481)...
Insurance law in the eighteenth century is often seen as a perfect illustration of the way commercia...
For over a century, there has been a continuing controversy concerning state versus federal regulati...
Any substantial inquiry into the functioning of the insurance commissioner in American society poses...
The sole thesis of this paper is that competition among insurers, tempered by state supervision of t...
The history of commercial law has often been written as if it were merely a product of the common la...
This article was presented at a symposium entitled “Public and Private: Are the Boundaries in Tran...
This Article presents both historical and empirical evidence to support the view that the Supreme Co...
This is the author's version of a chapter subsequently published as Flanagan, A. (2012). E-Commerce:...