The practice of judicial comment on the evidence has traditionally been the main form of jury control. Previous scholarly work has focused on the loss of the power in state courts, and has attributed the decline of judicial comment to a strict separation of functions between judge and jury and to regional differences in legal culture. This article examines two jurisdictions in which the power of comment long remained strong, at least in theory: the High Court of England, with its predecessors, and the federal courts in the United States. In both jurisdictions, judicial power to comment has been limited and in practice reduced, in the federal courts severely. The article reveals that this limitation developed with the advent of courts of app...
This Article traces the development of jury sentencing in non-capital felony cases in Virginia and K...
In his article, Professor Landsman surveys the historical progress of the civil jury. He argues that...
Citation: Hull, B.R. The jury system. Senior thesis, Kansas State Agricultural College, 1897.Morse D...
The practice of judicial comment on the evidence has traditionally been the main form of jury contro...
Jury practice in the state and federal courts evolved dramatically in the nineteenth and early twent...
The three articles offered in this forum on the early history of criminal appeals do us the great se...
This article provides a brief historical explanation of the role that juries have played in Anglo-Am...
The standard justification for the general prohibition against the evaluation of facts by appellat...
This article examines the evolution of the jury from its origins in England through its transportati...
Historically, the American legal system has accorded juries wide discretion to impose sentences in t...
Federal district court judges have several mechanisms for controlling civil jury functions. One mech...
The ancient common law system of England is still prevalent in many nations associated with—or previ...
In this Article, Professor Oldham provides a unique historical study of the special, or struck, jury...
The contemporary criminal justice system is guided, in large part, from the top down. A great deal o...
The Federal Bill of Rights and state constitutions rely heavily on procedural protections, especiall...
This Article traces the development of jury sentencing in non-capital felony cases in Virginia and K...
In his article, Professor Landsman surveys the historical progress of the civil jury. He argues that...
Citation: Hull, B.R. The jury system. Senior thesis, Kansas State Agricultural College, 1897.Morse D...
The practice of judicial comment on the evidence has traditionally been the main form of jury contro...
Jury practice in the state and federal courts evolved dramatically in the nineteenth and early twent...
The three articles offered in this forum on the early history of criminal appeals do us the great se...
This article provides a brief historical explanation of the role that juries have played in Anglo-Am...
The standard justification for the general prohibition against the evaluation of facts by appellat...
This article examines the evolution of the jury from its origins in England through its transportati...
Historically, the American legal system has accorded juries wide discretion to impose sentences in t...
Federal district court judges have several mechanisms for controlling civil jury functions. One mech...
The ancient common law system of England is still prevalent in many nations associated with—or previ...
In this Article, Professor Oldham provides a unique historical study of the special, or struck, jury...
The contemporary criminal justice system is guided, in large part, from the top down. A great deal o...
The Federal Bill of Rights and state constitutions rely heavily on procedural protections, especiall...
This Article traces the development of jury sentencing in non-capital felony cases in Virginia and K...
In his article, Professor Landsman surveys the historical progress of the civil jury. He argues that...
Citation: Hull, B.R. The jury system. Senior thesis, Kansas State Agricultural College, 1897.Morse D...