39 research outputs found

    JURISPRUDENCE AND METAPHYSICS--A TRIANGULAR CORRESPONDENCE

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    The Comity Doctrine

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    The doctrine of comity, as developed in the Netherlands during the last quarter of the Seventeenth Century, for the first time posed in stark simplicity the basic dilemma of conflicts law in modem times to mediate between the pretensions of territorial sovereignty and the needs of international commerce. As Ulrik Huber, the most influential exponent of the doctrine, observed: Exempla, quibus utemur, ad juris privati species maxime quidem pertinebunt, sed judicium de illis unice juris publici rationibus constat, & exinde definiri debent.\u27\u27 [ The examples which we shall use belong principally to the category of private law but their treatment rests exclusively on principles of public law, and they must be defined accordingly. ] In this summary account, it is proposed to sketch the background, to restore the meaning-still too frequently misunderstood- and to consider the relevance at the present time of the basic principle in this historic doctrine. It is hoped that a modest excursus of this nature in a field of special interest to the MaxPlanck- Institut fur auslandisches und internationales Privatrecht, founded by Ernst Rabel, may be accepted in acknowledgement of the signal contributions to the advancement of comparative legal science, for which we are indebted to the distinguished jurist, who has directed the Institut since 1945, Hans Dolle

    THE ENFORCEMENT OF FOREIGN JUDGMENTS IN ANGLO-AMERICAN LAW

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    Conflicts of laws are the necessary result of the division of judicial business. There are too many legal actions arising in localities too diffused to be tried in a single court or system of courts; consequently, litigation has to be distributed, and a highly complex body of jurisdictional regulations has been evolved to control the distribution. Once admit the multiplicity of courts, and diversities of law appear. Not only does the procedure in particular courts respond in some degree to the local traditions of the bar and to the specialized needs of the communities served, but indigenous precedents and practices establish themselves, which exercise an inevitable, if subtle, effect upon the conceptions of substantive law locally applied in judicial decision as well as in legislation. In an area so great and populous as the United States, this natural variety in both the administration of justice and formal legislation possesses sinister possibilities, which are, however, largely obviated by a common type of legal training, by a common body of legal doctrine, by the example of the federal courts and the state appellate courts, and by the numerous agencies which promote the interpenetration of legal ideas and practices. But to attain complete standardization appears neither feasible nor desirable. The fact that there will always be a measure of local independence in the development of legal institutions, even in a highly centralized, bureaucratic state, lies at the basis of the conception of judicial jurisdiction

    LAW AND LEARNING THEORY THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS OF LEGAL THEORY

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    COMPARATIVE RESEARCH AND UNIFICATION OF LAW

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    The current interest in international unification of law as a major objective of comparative legal research is significant testimony, in an era of accentuated nationalism, to the increasing solidarity of the modern world. In the development of this interest, Latin America has played a pioneer role. As early as 1826, the celebrated Congress convened at Panama envisaged in its deliberations what one of its members termed a System of Public Law for the Americas. The Congress of Montevideo of 1888-1889, anticipated by the Lima Congress of Jurists of 1878, produced the first substantial and successful codification of private international law, comprized in eight treaties and recently revised. Together with the Código Bustamante, this consolidation of the rules of private international law constitutes a notable instance of the spirit of legal unity flourishing in the Americas

    MR. JUSTICE HOLMES\u27 VIEW OF LEGAL SCIENCE

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    Roman Law and Its Influence on Western Civilization

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    Roman Law and Its Influence on Western Civilization

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    WHAT SHOULD THE AMERICAN LAW INSTITUTE DO?

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    It will generally be agreed, I believe, that the creation of the American Law Institute in 1923 was one of the most hopeful events in the recent legal history of this country. The plan for the Institute, as formulated in the impressive report which motivated its establishment, was well-conceived, broad-visioned, and based upon a comprehensive analysis of the chief defects in the legal system of the United States. This plan was significant in at least three important respects. In the first place, it defined an ambitious and, in some respects, a unique task for the Institute to accomplish; the report refers to the work which the organization should undertake as a restatement and adds that the object of this restatement should not only be to help make certain much that is now uncertain and to simplify unnecessary complexities, but also to promote those changes which will tend better to adapt the laws to the needs of life. In other words, the proposed object was to undertake an exhaustive study of the law of the United States in order to state that law in ideal terms, which should take account of new social needs and at the same time form a common pattern for judicial decision, to the end that the maladjustments of law to contemporary conditions and the evils of the law\u27s diversities might thereby be alleviated. In the second place, conceiving that the task of the improvement of the technical legal system was incumbent upon the legal profession as a whole, the plan designated a select and nevertheless representative organization through which a conscious, equal, and permanent union of the efforts of the judiciary, the bar, and the law schools might be formed to prosecute the task. In the third place, and this was perhaps the most significant feature of the plan, the necessity of comprehensive, exhaustive study was for the first time in this country adequately recognized as the indispensable basis of systematic legal reform. In sum, the Institute was formed to promote the improvement of the laws of the United States by scientific research. This feature, which has distinguished the Institute from the welter of organizations dedicated to legal reform, was highly significant and hopeful
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