Confronted with the growing problem of crowded dockets, federal courts have enacted and imposed a variety of rules and sanctions designed to discourage abuse of the judicial proces
In City of Burlington v. Dague, the United States Supreme Court settled the debate of whether contin...
(Excerpt) In the United States, there are two different government entities entrusted with overseein...
Courts may impose non-monetary sanctions on lawyers in litigation. These include what this article ...
(Excerpt) This Note explores how the federal circuits interpret the bad faith exception differently ...
In the United States, attorney\u27s fees are not generally recoverable. Following a review of this a...
Inherent sanctions, like Rule 11 sanctions, may be imposed against any person responsible for wrongd...
The power of our courts to wield certain implied powers “must necessarily result to our [c]ourts of ...
This article argues that the federal district courts have the inherent authority to compel litigants...
Did the Framers attempt to establish an effectual power in the national judiciary to void state law ...
Then good faith exception to the exclusionary rule recently received explicit impetus from the Fif...
(Excerpt) Article I, Section 8, Clause 4 of the United States Constitution contains the “Bankruptcy ...
This Article examines the constitutional basis of the federal courts’ independent exercise of “inher...
With only a small risk of overstatement, one could say that sanctions in civil litigation exploded d...
The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure has attracted a bevy of c...
This Comment examines Congress\u27 recent enactment of the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgesh...
In City of Burlington v. Dague, the United States Supreme Court settled the debate of whether contin...
(Excerpt) In the United States, there are two different government entities entrusted with overseein...
Courts may impose non-monetary sanctions on lawyers in litigation. These include what this article ...
(Excerpt) This Note explores how the federal circuits interpret the bad faith exception differently ...
In the United States, attorney\u27s fees are not generally recoverable. Following a review of this a...
Inherent sanctions, like Rule 11 sanctions, may be imposed against any person responsible for wrongd...
The power of our courts to wield certain implied powers “must necessarily result to our [c]ourts of ...
This article argues that the federal district courts have the inherent authority to compel litigants...
Did the Framers attempt to establish an effectual power in the national judiciary to void state law ...
Then good faith exception to the exclusionary rule recently received explicit impetus from the Fif...
(Excerpt) Article I, Section 8, Clause 4 of the United States Constitution contains the “Bankruptcy ...
This Article examines the constitutional basis of the federal courts’ independent exercise of “inher...
With only a small risk of overstatement, one could say that sanctions in civil litigation exploded d...
The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure has attracted a bevy of c...
This Comment examines Congress\u27 recent enactment of the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgesh...
In City of Burlington v. Dague, the United States Supreme Court settled the debate of whether contin...
(Excerpt) In the United States, there are two different government entities entrusted with overseein...
Courts may impose non-monetary sanctions on lawyers in litigation. These include what this article ...