Defendants, landowners and next of kin of persons buried in a cemetery which was being subjected to condemnation, moved to dismiss the federal government\u27s petition for condemnation of such lands on the grounds that the federal statutes did not authorize the United States to take land already dedicated to a public use for an inconsistent use; and that public cemeteries were not subject to the United States\u27 power of eminent domain. The land was being condemned to effectuate a federal project under the National Industrial Recovery Act and the Federal Emergency Relief Appropriations Act of 1935, and was for public purposes in furtherance of congressional powers. The federal district court denied the motion to dismiss, holding that the U...
Testator devised property to his adopted daughter for life and remainder to her children, but should...
In this manuscript, I address the largely unexplored issue of whether a sovereign may use its power ...
The Wandermere Corporation owned one mile of frontage along an open-access highway. The state planne...
Defendants, landowners and next of kin of persons buried in a cemetery which was being subjected to ...
The federal government, pursuant to authorizing statutes, sought to condemn defendant\u27s land, all...
Under the District of Columbia Redevelopment Act, an agency was created to redevelop blighted and sl...
Each year, agencies of the federal government condemn private land for their own use. Often individu...
The development of our modern and complex society has necessitated a widespread appropriation of pr...
Defendant city instituted a comprehensive urban redevelopment plan under which condemnation and purc...
Federal and state governments, through the use of eminent domain, may condemn the property of a priv...
This Article advocates that courts should distinguish between typical land use regulation and should...
The current application of the doctrine of eminent domain is representative of a steady degradation ...
This note will discuss the plight of abutting landowners, and explore various legal theories that ma...
In 1920 the Oklahoma Legislature passed an act authorizing condemnation of forty acres of land for ...
The public use requirement of eminent domain law may be working its way back into the United States ...
Testator devised property to his adopted daughter for life and remainder to her children, but should...
In this manuscript, I address the largely unexplored issue of whether a sovereign may use its power ...
The Wandermere Corporation owned one mile of frontage along an open-access highway. The state planne...
Defendants, landowners and next of kin of persons buried in a cemetery which was being subjected to ...
The federal government, pursuant to authorizing statutes, sought to condemn defendant\u27s land, all...
Under the District of Columbia Redevelopment Act, an agency was created to redevelop blighted and sl...
Each year, agencies of the federal government condemn private land for their own use. Often individu...
The development of our modern and complex society has necessitated a widespread appropriation of pr...
Defendant city instituted a comprehensive urban redevelopment plan under which condemnation and purc...
Federal and state governments, through the use of eminent domain, may condemn the property of a priv...
This Article advocates that courts should distinguish between typical land use regulation and should...
The current application of the doctrine of eminent domain is representative of a steady degradation ...
This note will discuss the plight of abutting landowners, and explore various legal theories that ma...
In 1920 the Oklahoma Legislature passed an act authorizing condemnation of forty acres of land for ...
The public use requirement of eminent domain law may be working its way back into the United States ...
Testator devised property to his adopted daughter for life and remainder to her children, but should...
In this manuscript, I address the largely unexplored issue of whether a sovereign may use its power ...
The Wandermere Corporation owned one mile of frontage along an open-access highway. The state planne...