288 research outputs found

    Solving the Federal Finality–Appealability Problem

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    Collateral Estoppel in New York

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    Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in Action: Assessing Their Impact

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    E. Harold Hallows Lecture Series

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    Devising Procedures that are Civil to Promote Justice that is Civilized

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    In a democracy, process is king to a very large extent, and this is especially so in the judicial branch. Even though substantive laws command attention, procedural rules ensure respect. Why is this true? One powerful reason is that when people end up in court, their case typically is not a matter of right against wrong, but of right against right. Decent process makes the painful task of deciding which party will prevail bearable and helps make the decision itself acceptable. To put my position plainly, I believe that the road to court-made justice is paved with good procedures. Later on we shall have a look at what I mean by good. For now, it is enough to note that procedures cannot be good or bad in isolation, without relation to their context. They must be viewed as part of an enlightened system of judicial administration, criminal and noncriminal. They must fit into a whole. The law may in some sense be a seamless web, but in the administration of justice separations are necessary and must be recognized. Some lines must demarcate the spheres of courts and some must demarcate the spheres of other agencies of justice, such as legislatures, official boards, or even private entities. One of today\u27s problems is that the seams are not showing clearly enough. To devise better court procedures, we must at some point determine what special role courts-in contrast to other agencies-can most usefully play in delivering justice to the people. This definitional process will help us know which quarrels and conflicts courts ought to countenance and which they should leave to other social instrumentalities

    Collateral Estoppel in New York

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