The whole judicial power of each state, at least for civil causes, should be vested in one great court, of which all tribunals should be branches, departments, or divisions. The business as well as the administration of The World's Work - Strana 6601913Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| Charles Richmond Henderson - 1910 - 472 str.
...principle which the committee desire to submit is that of unification of the judicial system : "I. The whole judicial power of each state, at least for...departments or divisions. The business as well as the judicial administration of this court should be thoroughly organized so as to prevent not merely waste... | |
| American Political Science Association. Annual Meeting - 1910 - 234 str.
...machine. The American Bar Association has recognized that the judicial power of the State ought to be vested in one great court of which all tribunals should be branches, departments and divisions. Considerable time must elapse before this recommendation of the American Bar Association... | |
| John Hampden Dougherty - 1915 - 408 str.
...in the main been well Association in favor of a unification of the judicial system, declaring that the whole judicial power of each State, at least for...departments or divisions. The business as well as the judicial administration of this court should be thoroughly organized so as to prevent not merely waste... | |
| Henry Campbell Black, Herbert Francis Wright - 1917 - 504 str.
...applied as his general recommendation for American adoption. "The whole judicial power of each state should be vested in one great court, of which all...tribunals should be branches, departments, or divisions. This court should be constituted in three chief branches: (1) county courts or municipal courts, (2)... | |
| 1917 - 892 str.
...been approved by the American Bar Association that the whole judicial power of the State, particularly for civil causes, should be vested in one great court, of •which all the trial tribunals should be branches or divisions, that being in effect the English system, which... | |
| James Brown Scott - 1917 - 896 str.
...approved by the American Ваг Association that the whole judicial power of the State, particularly for civil causes, should be vested In one great court, of which all the trial tribunals should be brunches or divisions, that being In effect the English system, which... | |
| James Brown Scott - 1917 - 892 str.
...been approved by the American Bar Association that the whole Judicial power of the State, particularly for civil causes, should be vested in one great court, of which all the trial tribunals should be brunches or divisions, that being In effect the English system, which... | |
| 1916 - 264 str.
...dean of the Harvard University Law School, as follows: "The whole judicial power of each state . . . should be vested in one great court, of which all...departments or divisions. The business as well as the judicial administration of this court should be thoroughly organized so as to prevent not merely waste... | |
| Illinois. General Assembly. Legislative Reference Bureau - 1920 - 1284 str.
...United States made the following recommendations in 1909 : 2 1 See Illinois Law Review, VII, 235. "1. The whole judicial power of each state, at least for...departments or divisions. The business as well as the judicial administration of this court should be thoroughly organized so as to prevent not merely waste... | |
| Charles Grove Haines, Bertha Moser Haines - 1921 - 624 str.
...committee of the American Bar Association and were presented to that organization in 1909.* Principle I. The whole judicial power of each state, at least for...which all tribunals should be branches, departments, and divisions. The business as well as the judicial administration of this court should be thoroughly... | |
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