MillarvTaylor 1769 4 Burr. 2303, 98 ER 201 is an English court decision that held there is a perpetual common law copyright and that no works ever enter the public domain . It represented a major victory for the bookseller monopolies. Facts Andrew Millar was a bookseller who in 1729 had purchased the publishing rights to James Thomson poet James Thomson s poem The Seasons. After the term of the exclusive rights granted under the Statute of Anne expired, Robert Taylor began publishing his own competing publication, which contained Thomson s poem. Following the passage of the first copyright law, the Statute of Anne , the practice of the England English publishing monopolies had not changed much. Although the purpose of the new law was to break up the monopolies that had been created by the English Crown and had served, in part, as a basis for the previous English Civil War . Despite the Statute of Anne s changes to the statutory law , the publishing monopolies continued to claim exclusive publishing rights under common law . Starting in the 1740s, London booksellers presented that argument in a series of court cases. Judgment The Court of the King s Bench, led by William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield Lord Mansfield with Aston and Willes JJ concurring in judgment, Sir Joseph Yates dissenting , sided with the publishers, finding that common law rights were not extinguished by the Statute of Anne . Under Mansfield s ruling, the publishers had a perpetual common law right to publish ... Scottish court in Hinton v. Donaldson . The issue was ultimately resolved against the London publishing monopolies in the landmark case of Donaldson v. Beckett . Despite being overturned, the case of Millarv. Taylor remains an important case in the development and history of copyright law. See ... cases Category United Kingdom copyright case law es Millarv. Taylor ... law rights to the work. Millar died shortly after the ruling and it was never appealed. As an English ... more details
Teck Corp. Ltd. v. Millar , 1972 , 33 DLR 3d 288 BCSC is the leading Canadian corporate law decision on a corporate director s fiduciary duty to resist a takeover bids. Justice Berger held that a director may resist a take over so long as they are acting in good faith, and they have reasonable grounds to believe that the take over will cause substantial harm to the interests of the corporation. The case represented a major change away from the standard set in the English case of Hogg v. Cramphorn Ltd. 1963 . See also List of notable Canadian lower court cases DEFAULTSORT Teck Corp. Ltd. V. Millar Category Canadian corporation case law Category 1972 in case law Category 1972 in Canada Canada law stub ... more details
Millar can refer to People Alan Millar , former Head of Philosophy at the University of Stirling Andrew Millar 1707 1768 , British publisher and bookseller Charles Vance Millar 1853 1926 , Canadian lawyer and financier Chris Millar b. 1983 , Scottish footballer. Craig Millar b. 1977 , Canadian former professional hockey player Darren Millar b. 1976 , Welsh politician David Millar b. 1977 , Scottish road racing cyclist Duncan Millar 1824 1881 , Scottish recipient of the Victoria Cross Fergus Millar , British historian Frederick Millar, 1st Baron Inchyra 1900 1989 , British diplomat Gavin Millar b. 1938 , Scottish film director Gertie Millar 1879 1952 , English singer and actress George Millar writer , Journalist, British World War II soldier, SOE agent, writer Harold Robert Millar 1869 1940 a Scottish graphic artist and illustrator Huntly D. Millar b. 1927 , founder of Millar Instruments, Inc. Ian Millar b. 1947 , Canadian show jumper John Millar philosopher John Millar 1735 1801 , Scottish philosopher and historian John A. Millar 1855 1915 , New Zealander politician Joseph Millar , American poet Judy Millar b. 1957 , New Zealand artist Kevin Millar b. 1971 , American baseball player Maggie Millar b. 1941 Australian actress Margaret Millar 1915 1994 , American Canadian mystery and suspense writer. Mark Millar b. 1969 , Scottish comic book writer Mary Millar 1936 1998 , English actress Martin Millar music producer b. 1979 , Northern Irish electronic musician Martin Millar writer , Scottish author Mike Millar b. 1965 , Canadian hockey player Miles Millar b 1970 , British screenwriter and producer Oliver Millar 1923 2007 , British art historian Paul Millar b. 1966 Northern Irish Football manager and former player Peter Millar journalist , British journalist and author Peter Millar soccer , former American Soccer player Renton Millar b. 1975 , Australian professional vertical skateboarder Robbie Millar 1967 2005 , Northern Irish chef and restaurateur Robert Millar b. 1958 ... more details
Taylorv. United States may refer to United States Supreme Court cases Taylorv. United States 1832 John Taylorv. United States 44 U.S. 197 1832 Taylorv. United States 1973 , 414 U.S. 17 1973 Taylorv. United States 1990 Arthur Lajuane Taylorv. United States 495 U.S. 575 1990 disambig ... more details
Will Millar is an Irish Canadian singer best known as a co founding member of The Irish Rovers . Until his departure in 1995, he was the group s front man. He plays guitar, banjo, mandolin and tin whistle . Born in Ballymena , County Antrim , Northern Ireland , Millar and his sister Sandra Beech performed as The Millar Kids before the family emigrated to Canada. Millar formed a Calypso Band, Kalypso Kews, that performed for two years in Toronto s Yonge Street at the Calypso Club. Millar moved to Calgary and hosted a children s TV show as well as forming an Irish folk trio. In the 1960s, Millar invited his brother George Millar singer George , his cousin Joe Millar Joe and Jimmy Ferguson to stay with him in Calgary. He brought them on his TV show and started performing with them at Calgary s first folk club, The Depression. Under the guidance of Les Weinstein, Millar s manager, he took the new group to San Francisco and after an audition they made the Purple Onion in San Francisco and the Ice House in Pasadena their home base club. In 1968, the group s recording of the Shel Silverstein song The Unicorn song The Unicorn went to 7 on the Billboard pop chart in the U.S. and became the Irish Rovers signature song. In 1995, Millar filed suit against his former bandmates and their lawyer .... ref Rover sues Rovers, Toronto Star , June 5, 1995, p. D3. ref In 1996, Millar formed a new band called ... Rovers, Millar produced six solo albums. Four Celtic instrmental CDs were released by Chacra ... of these albums went Gold in Canada. Millar has published two books, Children of the Unicorn published ... made it to the top ten in The Globe and Mail s non fiction list. Millar is also an oil painter with paintings ... Will Millar biography References references Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Millar, Will ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Millar, Will Category Canadian banjoists Category Canadian folk guitarists Category ... more details
Dr. Charles V. Taylor was an Australian linguist and the author of at least 19 books on topics ranging from African linguistics to church history ref name Google Books cite book url http books.google.com books?q inauthor 22Charles V. Taylor 22&lr &sa N&start 0 title inauthor Charles V. Taylor Google Books accessdate 8 December 2009 ref . He was also known as a Bible teacher and a frequent Christian magazine contributor ref cite web url http www.pastornet.net.au renewal journal10 i taylor.html title Gospel Essentials last Taylor first Charles accessdate 8 December 2009 ref . Eduacation Taylor held B.A.s in languages, theology , and music education music an M.A. in applied linguistics and a Ph.D. in a Central African language. Notable Positions Taylor was a Fellow of the Institute of Linguists , and he served as coordinator of applied linguistics courses at the University of Sydney for eight years. He also served on the staff of Garden City School of Ministries and on the board of the Creation Science Foundation . He died in his nineties in 2009 ref cite web url http creation.com charles vtaylor title Charles VTaylor work Creation Ministries International accessdate 9 December 2009 ref . Works Taylor s books include the decisive source for information on the Ugandan language Nkore Kiga . References reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Taylor, Charles V. ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 2009 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Taylor, Charles V. Category 2009 deaths Category Australian linguists ... more details
Infobox SCOTUS case Litigants Taylorv. Louisiana ArgueDate October 16 ArgueYear 1974 DecideDate January 21 DecideYear 1975 FullName Billy J. Taylorv. Louisiana USVol 419 USPage 522 Citation 95 S.Ct. ... Rehnquist LawsApplied Taylorv. Louisiana , Case citation 419 U.S. 522 1975 , is a significant ... duty jury pool , on the basis of having to register for jury duty, thus overturning Hoyt v. Florida , the 1961 case that had allowed such a practice. Background Billy J. Taylor was indicted and tried for aggravated kidnapping . ref Taylorv. Louisiana , 419 U.S. 522, 524, see http supreme.justia.com ... valid and not unconstitutional under federal law. Taylorv. Louisiana Footnotes and citations removed . ref Taylorv. Louisiana , 419 U.S. at 524 525 1975 , citing the case below, 282 So.2d 491, 497 ... from his jury ref name Issue Taylorv. Louisiana , 419 U. S. at 525 526. ref quote The issue we have ... and Fourteenth Amendments. Taylorv. Louisiana . ref name Issue A secondary issue was whether Taylor ... the rule. ref name Peters Pursuant to Peters v. Kiff , 407 U. S. 493, 500, 502 504 1972 , see Taylorv. Louisiana , 419 U. S. at 525 526, 528, FN 12. ref Decision The Supreme Court changed its ... 2008 , ISBN 978 0 13 118979 9 citing Hoyt v. Florida, 367 U.S. 57 1961 and Taylorv. Louisiana, 419 .... Taylorv. Louisiana ref Taylorv. Louisiana , 419 U.S. at 531, see http supreme.justia.com us 385 545 ... excluded from jury service. Taylorv. Louisiana ref Taylorv. Louisiana , 419 U.S. at 526, citing ... from prior caselaw, that The Court s prior cases are instructive ref Taylorv. Louisiana , 419 U.S. ... U. S. 85 86 1942 .... Taylorv. Louisiana . ref Taylorv. Louisiana , 419 U.S. at 526 527. ref Duncan ... http supreme.justia.com us 419 522 case.html Full Supreme Court opinion in Taylorv. Louisiana , courtesy ... Issues The issue before the court was not whether Taylor actually kidnapped anyone, but whether he ... quote Taylor s claim is that he was constitutionally entitled to a jury drawn from a venire constituting ... more details
Portal Indian Christianity Rev. Joseph van Someren Taylor Bellary , 3 July 1820 Edinburgh , 2 June 1881 , known more commonly as J. V. S. Taylor , was a British missionary in India who translated the Bible .... As has already been seen, the London Missionary Society occupied Surat Gujerat in 1815, ... J VTaylor .... V. S. Taylor s 1861 Old Version which remains the standard version today. ref Decentering translation ... was undertaken by the Serampore Mission Press in 1820. Then in 1861 Rev. J. V. S. Taylor translated ... languages and literatures ed. S. Innasi and V. Jayadevan eds . Madras Mariyakam, 1994, 61 67. Right from the start, there have been writers like JVS Taylor in the field of Grammar. ref J. V. S. Taylor ... . NAME Taylor, J. V. S. ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Translated the Bible into Gujarati DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1881 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Taylor, J. V. S. Category Translators ..., John Taylor missionary John Taylor M.D. ref A church history of Gujarat Robin H. S. Boyd 1981 In 1804 two missionaries, W.C. Loveless and Dr. John Taylor, were actually appointed to open up work in Surat ... of these was detained in Madras, and the other, John Taylor, MD, having been so discouraged by the state ..., in 1821. ref Joseph Taylor missionary Joseph Taylor d. Bombay , November 1852 or 1859 , was missionary in Bellary since 1812, then Belgaum since September, 1820. It was this Joseph Taylor who was father of J. V. S. Taylor. ref Bombay Guardian obituary The Missionary magazine and chronicle, Volumes 24 25 London Missionary Society 1860 ref Joseph van Someren Taylor was born on 3rd July in 1820 ... as missionary and sent him to India to be based in Madras . J. V. S. arrived in Baroda , Gujarat, in 1846 ... died in 1881. His son, Dr. George Pritchard Taylor remained in India and became first principal of Stevenson Divinity College Ahmedabad, named after William Fleming Stevenson 1832 1886 . G. P. Taylor ... grammar written by a missionary was JVS Taylor s 1820 1881 Gujarati Bhashanu Vyakaran ref The Gujarati ... more details
Other persons Robert Taylor The Very Reverend Robert V. Taylor born ca. 1958 in Cape Town , South Africa ... Church. File RobertVTaylor.jpg thumb Robert V. Taylor As a young man in South Africa, Taylor was an anti ..., Robert Taylor is a http www.youtube.com watch?v qkC0LBg6XHE nationally known leader showing individuals ...&query Robert TaylorTaylor resigns as dean of troubled St. Mark s March 29, 2008 http www.king5.com new day northwest Rev Robert VTaylor on Spirituality 96315784.html Robert V. Taylor s appearance on New Day with Margaret Larson, KING 5 TV NBC , Seattle, WA, June 10, 2010 Wake Up for Life Robert V. Taylor s blog http www.wakeupforlife.com Robert V. Taylor website http www.robertvtaylor.com http ... . NAME Taylor, Robert V. ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1958 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Taylor, Robert V. Category 1958 births Category LGBT Christians ... in New York City in 1984, having previously earned a Bachelor of Arts at Rhodes University . Taylor ... installation at St. Mark s, Taylor was asked by Archbishop Tutu to serve as the first president of the Desmond Tutu Peace Foundation USA. In 2001, Taylor was named chair of the Committee to End Homelessness ... by the county in 2005. In June 2005, U.S. Representative Jim McDermott nominated Taylor for Seattle ... in our nation, Robert Taylor is preaching the gospel of unity, of accepting each another and vowing ... Diocese of California . The nomination of Taylor and two other openly gay candidates led to speculation ... V. Gene Robinson in New Hampshire . Instead, the diocese elected the Rt. Rev. Marc Handley Andrus ... , published by Oxford University Press. Dean Taylor has published articles on the subject of interfaith ..., March 27, 2008, Robert Taylor announced his resignation as dean religion dean of St. Mark s Episcopal ... RVT 4.jpg File RVT with Desmond Tutu at table.jpg File RV Taylor youth Image 2.jpg File Seeds ... Update.htm Information Regarding Dean Taylor s Resignation March 28, 2008 Seattle Times http archives.seattletimes.nwsource.com ... more details
Infobox SCOTUS case Litigants Parratt v. Taylor ArgueDate March 2 ArgueYear 1981 DecideDate May 18 DecideYear 1981 FullName Parratt, et al. v. Taylor USVol 451 USPage 527 Citation 101 S. Ct. 1908 68 L. Ed. 2d 420 1981 U.S. LEXIS 99 49 U.S.L.W. 4509 Prior Subsequent Holding Procedural due process guarantees only a post deprivation hearing, provision of a right to sue in state court was provision of that hearing. SCOTUS 1975 1981 Majority Rehnquist JoinMajority Burger, Brennan, Stewart, White, Blackmun, Stevens Concurrence Stewart Concurrence2 White Concurrence3 Blackmun Concurrence4 Powell Concurrence Dissent Marshall LawsApplied Parratt v. Taylor , scite 451 527 1981 , was a case decided by the United States Supreme Court , in which the court considered the applicability of Due Process to a claim brought under Section 1983 . Background The respondent was an inmate at the Nebraska Penal and Correctional Complex who had ordered hobby materials by mail. When the hobby materials were lost, he brought suit under 42 U.S.C. section 1983 to recover their value, 23.50. Opinion of the Court The Court held that when procedural due process guarantees only a post deprivation hearing, provision of a right to sue in state court was provision of that hearing. The Court found that the deprivation did not occur as the result of some established state procedure, but as the result of the unauthorized failure of state agents to follow established state procedure, and because Nebraska had a tort claims procedure that provided a remedy to persons who had suffered a tortious loss at the hands of the State, but which respondent did not use, such procedure could have fully compensated respondent for his property loss and were sufficient to satisfy the requirements of due process. The Court found that although the respondent was deprived of property under color of state law, he had not sufficiently alleged a violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Category United States ... more details
SCOTUSCase Litigants Maine v. Taylor ArgueDate March 24 ArgueYear 1986 DecideDate June 23 DecideYear 1986 FullName Maine v. Taylor et al. USVol 477 USPage 131 Citation 106 S. Ct. 2440 91 L. Ed. 2d 110 1986 U.S. LEXIS 111 Prior In City of Philadelphia v. New Jersey , the court ruled that New Jersey s ban of out of state solid waste was facially discriminatory to the state s residents in a national market and was therefore overturned. Subsequent Holding States may prohibit the importation of out of state goods moving within the flow of commerce only if the prohibition serves a legitimate local concern and there are no other means of protecting that interest. SCOTUS 1981 1986 Majority Blackmun JoinMajority Burger, Brennan, White, Marshall, Powell, Rehnquist, O Connor Dissent Stevens JoinDissent LawsApplied Dormant Commerce Clause Maine v. Taylor , Case citation 477 U.S. 131 1986 , ref citation was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that there was an exception to the virtually per se invalidity rule of the dormant commerce clause . The Supreme Court of the United States found that a Maine law prohibiting the importation of out of state bait fish was constitutional because Maine authorities couldn t be certain that imported fish would be free of parasitism parasites and Introduced species non native species that might pose environmental harm to local ecology . Discriminatory laws may be upheld only if they serve legitimate local purposes that could not adequately be served by available nondiscriminatory alternatives, wrote Justice Harry Blackmun Blackmun , author of the majority opinion. See also List of United States Supreme Court cases, volume 477 List of United States Supreme Court cases Lists of United States Supreme Court cases by volume List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Rehnquist Court External links note citation http caselaw.lp.findlaw.com scripts getcase.pl?navby CASE&court US&vol 477&page 131 477 U.S. 131 Full text of the opinion ... more details
Infobox Court Case name Nudd vTaylor court Supreme Court of Queensland date decided 30 August 2000 full name Nudd vTaylor citations 2000 QSC 344 judges Holmes J prior actions subsequent actions opinions Nudd vTaylor 2000 QSC 344, was a court legal case case , decided in the Supreme Court of Queensland on 30 August 2000. The case concerned Conflict of laws Australian Private International Law , specifically giving a Queensland authority to the application of the Mozambique rule Mo ambique rule . ref Nudd vTaylor 2000 QSC 344, 344. ref Facts NEED SUMMARIZING cquote The plaintiff and defendant in this matter lived in a de facto relationship for a number of years. The plaintiff has sought declarations ... the defendant is resident in New Zealand. ref Nudd vTaylor 2000 QSC 344, 1 3 . ref Judgement Could ... the party against whom the obligation is asserted is not within the jurisdiction? ref Nudd vTaylor ..., however, the plaintiff s counsel, Mr Taylor, confined his submissions to the claim in respect ... stated ref AFS Freight Management Pty Ltd v Ziegler Nederland BV 2000 QSC 489, 10 . ref ... stated by Holland J in National Commercial Bank v Wimborne ref 1979 11 NSWLR 156. ref cquote .... ref National Commercial Bank v Wimborne 1979 11 NSWLR 156, 174. ref His Honour continued, cquote To what ... Commercial Bank v Wimborne 1979 11 NSWLR 156, 174. ref That case was cited with approval by the New South Wales Court of Appeal in Marlborough Harbour Board v Charter Travel Co Ltd . ref 1989 ... v Gulf Oceanic ref 1985 1 Lloyds Rep 539. ref concluded that a plaintiff submitted himself to the incidents ... Referring to this Case AFS Freight Management Pty Ltd v Ziegler Nederland BV 2000 QSC 489. sup Font color green Applied font sup Cases Considered by this Case Australia Potter v Broken Hill Proprietary Company Ltd Potter v Broken Hill Proprietary Company Ltd 1906 3 CLR 479. sup Font color green Cited font sup United Kingdom Mozambique rule British South Africa Co v Companhia de Mo ambique 1893 ... more details
Infobox Court Case name Taylorv Caldwell court King s Bench image Surrey Music Hall.jpg date filed date decided 6 May 1863 full name citations 1863 http www.bailii.org ew cases EWHC QB 1863 J1.html EWHC QB J1 , 1863 3 B & S 826, 122 ER 309 judges prior actions subsequent actions opinions Colin Blackburn, Baron Blackburn Blackburn J transcripts http www.bailii.org ew cases EWHC QB 1863 J1.html EWHC QB J1 Keywords Taylorv Caldwell 1863 3 B & S 826 122 ER 309 1863 http www.bailii.org ew cases EWHC QB 1863 J1.html EWHC QB J1 is a landmark England English contract law case, with an opinion delivered by Justice Blackburn which established the doctrine of common law impossibility . Facts Caldwell & Bishop owned Royal Surrey Gardens Surrey Gardens & Music Hall , and agreed to rent it out to Taylor & Lewis for Pound sterling 100 a day. Taylor had planned to use the music hall for four concerts and day and evening fetes on Monday 17 June, Monday 15 July, Monday 5 August, and Monday 19 August 1861. They were going to provide a variety of extravagant entertainments including a singing performance by Sims Reeves , a thirty five to forty piece military and quadrille band, al fresco entertainments, minstrels, fireworks and full illuminations, a ballet or divertissement, a wizard and Grecian statues, tight rope performances, rifle galleries, air gun shooting, Chinese and Parisian games, boats on the lake, and aquatic sports. According to the contract the parties had signed, the defendants were to provide most of the British people British performers. Taylor & Lewis agreed to pay one hundred pounds sterling in the evening of the day of each concert by a crossed cheque, and also to find and provide, at their own cost, all the necessary artistes for the concerts, including Mr. Sims Reeves ... References Reflist External links Full text of decision from BAILII cite BAILII litigants Taylorv ... main cases TaylorImposs.html Excerpted version of case DEFAULTSORT TaylorV Caldwell Category ... more details
Infobox SCOTUS case Litigants Taylorv. Beckham ArgueDate April 30, and May 1 ArgueYear 1900 DecideDate May 21 DecideYear 1900 FullName William S. Taylor and John Marshall, Plaintiffs in Err., v. J. C ... Dissent Henry B. Brown Dissent John Marshall Harlan LawsApplied Taylorv. Beckham , ussc ... Amendment. ref name willoughby Willoughby, Taylorv. Beckham ref As a creation of the Kentucky ... Effects Taylorv. Beckham established as a judicial principle that public offices are mere agencies ... & Company location New York City, New York year 1910 chapter TaylorV. Beckham url http chestofbooks.com society law The Constitutional Law Of The United States 84 TaylorV Beckham.html accessdate 2010 ... gubernatorial candidate William S. Taylor and Democratic Party United States Democratic Lieutenant ... election, held on November 7, 1899, Taylor received 193,714 votes to Democrat William Goebel s 191,331 ... was invalid, Taylor sued to prevent Beckham from exercising the authority of the governor s office. Beckham sued Taylor for possession of the Old State Capitol Kentucky state capitol and Old Governor ... court s decision on appeal. The court further rejected Taylor s claim that he had been deprived of property ... of Taylor s claim under the Fourteenth Amendment gave him grounds to appeal the decision to the U.S. ... States Chief Justice Melville Fuller , the Supreme Court also rejected Taylor s claim to loss of property without due process and thus refused to intervene on Taylor s behalf, claiming that no federal ... of Taylor based on his claim of loss of property without due process. He further argued that elective ... United States Republican opponent, Attorney General of Kentucky Attorney General William S. Taylor ... as W. P. Taylor instead of W. S. Taylor Democrats claimed these votes should be invalidated. ref ... with black hair. He is wearing a black coat buttoned at the high chest and facing left William S. Taylor was declared the winner of the election. When the official tally was announced, Taylor had won ... more details
inline Taylorv. Taintor http caselaw.lp.findlaw.com scripts getcase.pl?navby CASE&court US&vol 83&page .... ref Lund v. Seneca County Sheriff s Department , 230 F.3d 196, 198 6th Cir. 2000 ref It is not the holding ... more details
SCOTUSCase Litigants Hickman v. Taylor ArgueDate November 13 ArgueYear 1946 DecideDate January 13 DecideYear 1947 FullName Hickman, Administrator v. Taylor, et al., trading as Taylor & Anderson Towing & Lighterage Company, et al. Citation 67 S. Ct. 385 91 L. Ed. 451 1947 U.S. LEXIS 2966 34 Ohio Op. 395 USVol 329 USPage 495 Prior Cert. to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit Holding Discovery of written materials obtained or prepared by an adversary s counsel with an eye toward litigation may not be had unless party seeking discovery can establish that relevant and non privileged facts remain hidden in an attorney s file and where production of those facts is essential to the preparation of one s case. SCOTUS 1946 1949 Majority Murphy JoinMajority Vinson, Black, Reed, Douglas, Rutledge, Burton Concurrence Jackson JoinConcurrence Frankfurter LawsApplied Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26 wikisource Hickman v. Taylor , Case citation 329 U.S. 495 1947 , is a Supreme Court of the United States United States Supreme Court case in which the Court recognized the work product doctrine , which holds that information obtained or produced by or for Lawyer attorneys in anticipation of litigation may be protected from Discovery law discovery under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure . The Court s decision in the case was unanimous. Parties Plaintiff Petitioner Hickman, representative of one of five deceased employees on the John M. Taylor tugboat , owned and operated by Defendant. Abraham E. Freedman, attorney for Petitioner. Defendant Taylor & Anderson Towing & Lighterage Co., et al., company owning tugboat in question. Respondent William I. Radner, of Washington, D.C., and Samuel B. Fortenbaugh, Jr., of Philadelphia, Pa., for the defendants. Background State of law Federal ... v. Taylor , 329 U.S. 495 1947 findlaw http laws.findlaw.com us 329 495.html justia http supreme.justia.com ...?title Hickman v. Taylor Category 1947 in United States case law Category United States Supreme ... more details
Unreferenced date July 2009 Infobox SCOTUS case Litigants Taylorv. State of Mississippi ArgueDateA April 15 ArgueDateB 16 ArgueYear 1943 DecideDate June 14 DecideYear 1943 FullName USVol 319 USPage 583 Citation 63 S. Ct. 1200 87 L. Ed. 1600 1943 U.S. LEXIS 489 Prior Subsequent Holding SCOTUS 1943 1945 Majority JoinMajority Concurrence JoinConcurrence Concurrence2 JoinConcurrence2 Concurrence Dissent JoinConcurrence Dissent Dissent JoinDissent Dissent2 JoinDissent2 LawsApplied Taylorv. State of Mississippi , Case citation 319 U.S. 583 1943 , was a case involving three Jehovah s Witnesses in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that criminal sanction cannot be imposed for communication that has not been shown to have been done with an evil or sinister purpose, to have advocated or incited subversive action against the nation or state, or to have threatened any clear and present danger to our institutions or our government. Facts of the case March 20, 1942, the State of Mississippi enacted a statute the title of which declares that it is intended to 319 U.S. 583, 584 secure the peace and safety of the United States and of the State of Mississippi during war and to prohibit acts detrimental to public peace and safety. The first section, with which alone we are here concerned, provides That any person who individually, or as a member of any organization, association, or otherwise, shall intentionally preach, teach, or disseminate any teachings, creed, theory, or set of alleged principles, orally, or by means of a phonograph or other contrivance of any kind or nature, or by any other means or method, or by the distribution of any sort of literature, or written or printed matter, designed and calculated to encourage violence, sabotage, or disloyalty to the government ... DEFAULTSORT TaylorV. State Of Mississippi Category 1943 in United States case law Category United ... shall not exceed ten years. Taylor was indicted for orally disseminating teachings designed ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Taylorv. Standard Gas Co. 306 U.S. 307 1939 is an important case decided by the U.S. Supreme Court , which laid down the Deep Rock doctrine as a rule of bankruptcy and corporate law . The rule requires that, where a subsidiary corporation declares bankruptcy and an insider or controlling shareholder of that subsidiary corporation asserts claims as a creditor against the subsidiary, loans made by the insider to the subsidiary corporation may be deemed to receive the same treatment as shares of stock owned by the insider. Therefore, the insider s claims will be subordinated to the claims of all other creditors, i.e. other creditors will be paid first, and if there is nothing left after other creditors are paid then the insider gets nothing. This also applies and indeed the doctrine was first established where a parent company asserts such claims against its own subsidiary . The doctrine will be applied where Equity law equity requires, particularly where the subsidiary was undercapitalized at the time that it was established, and can thereby be shown to have been mismanaged for the parent corporation s benefit. This was the circumstance in the original Supreme Court case, where the Deep Rock Oil Corporation was an undercapitalized subsidiary of the defendant Standard Gas Company. See also US corporate law DEFAULTSORT TaylorV. Standard Gas Co. Category United States bankruptcy law Category United States securities law Category United States corporation case law ... more details
Taylorv Connex South Eastern Ltd 5.7.2000 Appeal No EAT 1243 99, is a UK labour law case, concerning the TUPE Regulations. Facts Mr Taylor was a chartered accountant, employed as an administrator by the SouthEastern Train Company, a sub division of British Rail . It was privatised and sold to Connex South Eastern Ltd in 1996. In 1997 he got a new job as Deputy Company Secretary, but on his new contract he made amendments, amounting to a counter offer in contract, therefore, according to the EAT, remaining employed under the terms of his old agreement. In 1998 he was given, according to ongoing changes throughout the company, another new contract, which contained clauses that were to his detriment he lost some holiday and redundancy entitlement . He complained, but the company would not budge. They insisted he accept the terms or have three weeks notice. The tribunal found that he was redundant, but that he was dismissed not for this ref ERA 1996 s 163 2 there is a statutory presumption that someone loses their job by reason of redundancy i.e. so that a redudancy payment is available , unless the employer proves otherwise. ref but for some other substantial reason under s 98 of the Employment Rights Act 1996 . He therefore lost his claim for unfair dismissal. He appealed. Judgment ... 1 now r 7 of the Transfer of Undertakings Protection of Employment Regulations Mr Taylor was actually ... dismissed. The position is, that Mr Taylor was of a sufficiently senior level in employment with British ... negotiations with the vast majority of Mr Taylor s fellows must have concluded a matter of a few ... to understand that the relevant negotiations between Mr Taylor as an individual and his colleagues ... employees had accepted it, was a factor, specifically referred to in the Catamaran Cruisers Ltd v ... Taylor by reason of his refusal to accept that change was a reason connected with the transfer, falling within regulation 8 1 . 36 It therefore follows automatically that Mr Taylor s dismissal was unfair ... more details
SCOTUSCase Litigants Taylorv. United States ArgueDate February 28 ArgueYear 1990 DecideDate May 29 DecideYear 1990 FullName Arthur Lajuane Taylorv. United States of America USVol 495 USPage 575 Citation Prior Sentence imposed by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri and affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit Eighth Circuit , 864 F.2d 625 8th Cir. 1989 , cert. granted, 493 U.S. 889 1989 . Subsequent Holding In determining whether a prior burglary conviction counts against a defendant for purposes of the Armed Career Criminal Act , district courts must employ a formal categorical approach, looking only to the fact of the prior conviction and the statutory definition of the predicate offense and also, in a narrow class of cases, the charging documents and jury instructions, so that the sentencing court may determine whether the defendant had been convicted of burglary in the generic sense. SCOTUS 1988 1990 Majority Blackmun JoinMajority Rehnquist, Brennan, White, Marshall, Stevens, O Connor, Kennedy, Scalia except Part II Concurrence Scalia LawsApplied UnitedStatesCode 18 924 e Taylorv. United States , Case citation 495 U.S. 575 1990 , filled an important gap in the federal criminal law of sentencing. The federal criminal code does not contain a definition of many crimes, including burglary , the crime at issue in this case ... law. Facts Taylor pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm in the United States ... . At the time, Taylor had four prior convictions&mdash one for robbery, one for assault, and two were ... injury to another. Taylor conceded that his prior assault and arson convictions qualified for the 924 ... rejected this argument, and sentenced Taylor to 15 years without parole. The United States Court of Appeals ... a state chooses to define it, the district court properly counted both of Taylor s Missouri burglary ... of reading 924 e s definition of burglary as the common law definition. Before the Supreme Court, Taylor ... more details
John Millar may refer to John Millar philosopher 1735 1802 , Scottish philosopher and historian John Millar, Lord Craighill 1817 1888 , Scottish judge John A. Millar 1855 1915 , New Zealand politician John Millar Canadian politician 1866 1950 John Millar footballer born 1923 , Scottish footballer John Millar footballer born 1927 , Scottish footballer John Millar, Scottish confectioner, see Millar McCowan Sandy Millar born 1939 , John Alexander Millar, Anglican bishop See also John Miller disambiguation John Millar Andrews , Prime Minister of Northern Ireland John Millar Watt , Scottish artist hndis Millar, John ... more details
For those of a similar name Keith Miller disambiguation Infobox AFL player NEW name Keith Millar fullname Keith James Millar caption image birth date birth date 1906 08 15 df y birth place Richmond, Victoria , Australia death date death date and age 1971 07 13 1906 08 15 df y death place Melbourne originalteam heightweight 183 cm 82 kg position Half forward debutinformation Round 10, 1924 VFL season 1924 , Richmond Football Club Richmond vs BR Sydney Swans South Melbourne at Bob Jane Stadium Lake Oval years 1924 27, 1930 clubs Richmond Football Club Richmond games goals 37 38 statsend 1930 careerhighlights BR Keith James Millar 15 August 1906 13 July 1971 was an Australian sportsman who played Australian rules football with Richmond Football Club Richmond in the Australian Football League Victorian Football League VFL during the 1920s and first class cricket for Victorian Bushrangers Victoria . Not to be confused with Australian Test cricketer Keith Miller , who played in the Victorian Football League as well. Millar, a half forward, took part in the 1924 round robin finals series, where ... matches. After retiring in 1930 VFL season 1930 , Millar returned to the league as a field ... rounder, Millar appeared in 14 first class matches as a right handed batsman and right arm fast medium pace bowler. Millar made 382 runs at 19.10 with two half centuries and took 14 wickets at 36.28 ... 11 11426.html title Wellington v Victoria 1924 25 publisher CricketArchive ref They took on New ... in the same tour and, despite batting at ten, Millar scored 56 in his first innings. ref cite web url http www.cricketarchive.com Archive Scorecards 11 11431.html title New Zealand v Victoria ... title Queensland v Victoria 1926 27 publisher CricketArchive ref References reflist 1 External links ... Cricinfo Keith Millar Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Millar, Keith ALTERNATIVE ... DATE OF DEATH 13 July 1971 PLACE OF DEATH Melbourne DEFAULTSORT Millar, Keith Category Australian ... more details
Martin Millar may refer to Martin Millar writer Martin Millar music producer Martin Millar sport shooter , see 2002 Commonwealth Games results See also Martin Miller disambiguation hndis name Millar, Martin ... more details
Peter Millar may refer to Peter Millar journalist , British journalist, critic and author Peter Millar soccer , retired Scottish American soccer player Pete Millar 1929 2003 , American illustrator, cartoonist, and drag racer See also Peter Miller disambiguation hndis Millar, Peter ... more details
James Millar may refer to James Millar scientist 1762 1827 , Scottish physician and editor of the Encyclop dia Britannica James Millar Australian actor James Millar skier , Australian Paralympic skier James Duncan Millar 1871 1932 , Scottish barrister and Liberal, later National Liberal, politician Jimmy Millar born 1934 , Scottish footballer who played for Dunfermline Athletic, Rangers and Dundee United Jimmy Millar footballer born 1870 , Scottish footballer who played for Sunderland and Scotland James Millar judoka See also Jimmy Millar disambiguation James Miller disambiguation hndis Millar, James ... more details