The request of the editor of the Review that I comment upon the new Nebraska rules of civil procedure, which become effective ninety days after the adjournment of the legislature next year, was one which I felt I could not refuse in view of my general interest in procedural reform. But now that I have spent some time in study of the rules and their background, I wonder if I was wise in yielding. For my experience in practice, in teaching, and in writing, and as judge seems to have so conditioned me in favor of a very simple--even “loose,” according to some people—system of pleading that I instinctively react for or against a new set of rules as they may or may not fit in with my views. Of course, that is a natural reaction of any critic; but...
Thirty years ago, the Nebraska Supreme Court adopted the American Bar Association\u27s 1969 Model Co...
My contribution to this symposium will consist of the advancement of one main thesis and four subord...
In furtherance of the Nebraska Law Review\u27s attempt to bring more material to the Nebraska lawyer...
The request of the editor of the Review that I comment upon the new Nebraska rules of civil procedur...
During the past twelve years, several articles in this Review have discussed practice and procedure ...
Regulation of lawyer conduct in the State of Nebraska. Upon the Nebraska Supreme Court\u27s adoption...
Opening remarks to the November 15, 2002, University of Nebraska College of Law ethics conference on...
The class action represents an exception to the fundamental legal principle that one is not bound b...
Why would a district court judge write about or revise an appellate court judge’s work on appellate ...
In 1951, the Nebraska Legislature enacted a summary judgment procedure for the state, patterned afte...
The class action represents an exception to the fundamental legal principle that one is not bound b...
The Green v. Village of Terrytown case presented to the Supreme Court of Nebraska for the first time...
When twenty-one lawyers and judges bring to fruition in the short space of eight months a task so ex...
An introduction to the articles resulting from a panel discussion at the November 15, 2002, ethics c...
The present series of articles seeks to test the extent to which the dictates of this common profess...
Thirty years ago, the Nebraska Supreme Court adopted the American Bar Association\u27s 1969 Model Co...
My contribution to this symposium will consist of the advancement of one main thesis and four subord...
In furtherance of the Nebraska Law Review\u27s attempt to bring more material to the Nebraska lawyer...
The request of the editor of the Review that I comment upon the new Nebraska rules of civil procedur...
During the past twelve years, several articles in this Review have discussed practice and procedure ...
Regulation of lawyer conduct in the State of Nebraska. Upon the Nebraska Supreme Court\u27s adoption...
Opening remarks to the November 15, 2002, University of Nebraska College of Law ethics conference on...
The class action represents an exception to the fundamental legal principle that one is not bound b...
Why would a district court judge write about or revise an appellate court judge’s work on appellate ...
In 1951, the Nebraska Legislature enacted a summary judgment procedure for the state, patterned afte...
The class action represents an exception to the fundamental legal principle that one is not bound b...
The Green v. Village of Terrytown case presented to the Supreme Court of Nebraska for the first time...
When twenty-one lawyers and judges bring to fruition in the short space of eight months a task so ex...
An introduction to the articles resulting from a panel discussion at the November 15, 2002, ethics c...
The present series of articles seeks to test the extent to which the dictates of this common profess...
Thirty years ago, the Nebraska Supreme Court adopted the American Bar Association\u27s 1969 Model Co...
My contribution to this symposium will consist of the advancement of one main thesis and four subord...
In furtherance of the Nebraska Law Review\u27s attempt to bring more material to the Nebraska lawyer...