Resort to a legal fiction has, from ancient times, been a common means of extending or limiting both rights of action, and rights of defense to actions, where justice seemed to require or as the case might be, to deny a remedy. An arbitrary assumption has been made by which a new character has been assigned to a party, and thereby his access to the courts facilitated or obstructed
The subject. The article studies legal fictions from the point of view of their correlation with ide...
In Discourses of Ordinary Justice, I read fiction by Charles Chesnutt, Edith Wharton, and Richard Wr...
The great writers have one thing in common-they castigate the human race, including themselves, the ...
Resort to a legal fiction has, from ancient times, been a common means of extending or limiting both...
Many judges faced with the task of rendering difficult decisions have a habit of pretending things t...
In this age of fact, fancy is at a discount. Consequently legal fictions, which required the play of...
Commentators on legal fictions often apply the term to doctrines that make the law’s image of the wo...
Starting with the Middle Ages, the system of writs (forms of actions) began to dominate the English ...
Legal Fictions were one of the most distinctive and reviled features of the common law. Until the m...
The United States Supreme Court first adopted the legal fiction of the personification of an object ...
The proposed theoretical motivation for legal fictionalism begins by focusing upon the seemingly sup...
Legal fictions contain embedded nuggets of information about social reality and reveal important asp...
Before the era of reform, the common law was replete with fictions. The procedure by which litigatio...
Although the law abounds in fabrications, the term “legal fiction” is best reserved for what Alf Ros...
Claims that the Justices in Dred Scott abandoned a tradition of judicial restraint rely on an anachr...
The subject. The article studies legal fictions from the point of view of their correlation with ide...
In Discourses of Ordinary Justice, I read fiction by Charles Chesnutt, Edith Wharton, and Richard Wr...
The great writers have one thing in common-they castigate the human race, including themselves, the ...
Resort to a legal fiction has, from ancient times, been a common means of extending or limiting both...
Many judges faced with the task of rendering difficult decisions have a habit of pretending things t...
In this age of fact, fancy is at a discount. Consequently legal fictions, which required the play of...
Commentators on legal fictions often apply the term to doctrines that make the law’s image of the wo...
Starting with the Middle Ages, the system of writs (forms of actions) began to dominate the English ...
Legal Fictions were one of the most distinctive and reviled features of the common law. Until the m...
The United States Supreme Court first adopted the legal fiction of the personification of an object ...
The proposed theoretical motivation for legal fictionalism begins by focusing upon the seemingly sup...
Legal fictions contain embedded nuggets of information about social reality and reveal important asp...
Before the era of reform, the common law was replete with fictions. The procedure by which litigatio...
Although the law abounds in fabrications, the term “legal fiction” is best reserved for what Alf Ros...
Claims that the Justices in Dred Scott abandoned a tradition of judicial restraint rely on an anachr...
The subject. The article studies legal fictions from the point of view of their correlation with ide...
In Discourses of Ordinary Justice, I read fiction by Charles Chesnutt, Edith Wharton, and Richard Wr...
The great writers have one thing in common-they castigate the human race, including themselves, the ...