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Besieged by Iroquois raids, a massive army led by General John Sullivan enacts a scorched-earth campaign against the Iroquois
Alien Registration- Palmer, George M. (Presque Isle, Aroostook County)
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Aboveground fuel oil storage tanks
A review of the American Petroleum Institute Standard 650 and Appendixes points out the advantages of using high strength steel and the variable point design method (Appendix K) to obtain reasonably uniform shell stresses. Design limitations imposed by notch toughness and residual stresses are pointed out.
Design considerations for the installation of an internal floating roof in a standard cone roof tank are discussed. Methods of calculating evaporation losses and an economic justification for a floating roof are included. Budget estimate figures have been compiled as a function of tank capacity for tanks, site preparation and tank ringwall or piled mat foundations.
Installation of a storage tank is subject to government approval by the State of New Jersey Department of Labor and Industry and Environmental Protection. A review of title 12:133 of the New Jersey Administrative Code (NJAC) Flammable and Combustible Liquids as it applies to tank construction was made. The requirements of the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA) follow (NJAC) specifications
The Effect of Misunderstanding on Contract Formation and Reformation Under the Restatement of Contracts Second
The presence of misunderstanding at the time of an apparent agreement creates difficult problems in the law of contract formation and equally difficult problems when the apparent agreement is in ·writing and reformation is sought. The rules formulated in the original Restatement of Contracts are unsatisfactory in both areas. The preparation of the Restatement Second, which is now under way for contracts, includes changes in the rules of contract formation but the changes emerging are no more satisfactory than the original rules. The current version of the Restatement Second, contained in Tentative Draft No. 1, accepts the objective theory of contract formation, as did the original Restatement, but the attempt to formulate general rules based on that theory contains two principal shortcomings that seem almost at cross purposes. In one aspect it limits doctrine too narrowly, so as to lead to the conclusion that there is no contract in some situations in which a contract should and almost certainly will be found. In another aspect it extends doctrine beyond permissible limits, so as to lead to a finding of contract in instances where there should be none
TESTAMENTARY DISPOSITION TO THE TRUSTEE OF AN INTER VIVOS TRUST
The problem of this paper is narrow but important in connection with testamentary dispositions. A man establishes an inter vivos trust, in writing, and later attempts by will to add to the corpus of the trust without repeating in the will the terms of the trust. In some instances he thereafter amends the trust with the expectation that the property bequeathed to the trustee will be held in accordance with the amended terms. This is a simple and convenient method of disposing of property at death and most people probably would take for granted that the disposition is effective. Yet in some situations it is almost certainly not effective as intended and in others the risk of invalidity is serious. Without adequate reason the law has departed too far from the common understanding of those whose activities it regulates. It is time to remedy the situation and a remedy will be suggested. First, however, the present state of the law needs to be reviewed
NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENTS UNDER THE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE
The ambitious undertaking of the American Law Institute and the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws to draft a Uniform Commercial Code includes a proposed revision of the Negotiable Instruments Law. This is not merely an attempt to patch up the present statute. It is virtually a complete rewriting. It includes many changes and additions in substance as well as a radical reorganization and rephrasing of language where no change in substance is designed. · It includes the much needed separation of the provisions relating to investment instruments such as corporate bonds from those relating to bills, checks, notes and other like instruments. The latter class of instruments is covered in Article 3 ( Commercial Paper ), the former, in Article 8 ( Investment Securities ). Article 3 also includes a division on bank collections, a subject not heretofore treated in any uniform act of the Commissioners on Uniform State Laws
Private Trusts for Indefinite Beneficiaries
Recently, in McPhail v. Doulton (In re Baden\u27s Deed Trusts), the House of Lords reached a decision that marks an important change in the English law of trusts which could be important also for American law. It held that there is a single test of validity for private trusts and for powers of appointment where the issue is whether the beneficiaries of the trust or the objects of the power are sufficiently definite, and that this single test is that applicable to powers of appointment. For nearly 170 years, since the decision in Morice v. Bishop of Durham, English law has had a stricter test of validity for a trust than for a power, and the same has been true in virtually all American jurisdictions. For private trusts in which the beneficiaries are designated by some group description, the settled rule has been that the trust fails unless the entire class of beneficiaries is capable of ascertainment. This has been true even though the trustee is given a power of selection from within the group, so that through the exercise of the power the beneficiaries would in fact be defined or identified. This test was thought to be settled for English law by the decision of the Court of Appeal in Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Broadway Cottages Trust, where the court said that a trust for such members of a given class of objects as the trustees shall select is void for uncertainty, unless the whole range of objects eligible for selection is ascertained or capable of ascertainment ...
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