Search results for: "trump" (943 results)
protection of the use of player names and statistics trumps players’ publicity rights.5 In response to a players’ union’s efforts to prohibit C.B.C
argued that its charter trumped conflicting state law, with one scholar citing the federal Contract Clause as one possible bar to reform.85 And
textbooks present a story that trumpets the Court as the defender of our constitutional rights—especially as they pertain to minorities. In this story
” (footnote omitted)); Diana B. Henriques, Religion Trumps Regulation as Legal Exemptions Grow, N.Y. TIMES, Oct. 8, 2006, at A1 (quoting Rabbi Joseph
the crime trumps Apprendi analysis. Kirk R. II, 857 A.2d at 915 (“[T]here is nothing that prevents our legislature from requiring the jury to make a
trumpet investments in compliance programs. 131 However, Garrett found that “[p]rosecutors appoint monitors quite unevenly,” while “[i]n contrast
decide that the railroad’s right to full use of the track trumped the farmer’s right to full use of his land, or vice versa, leaving the loser worse
constitutional rights as ju- dicially enforceable trumps.445 The very premise of modern rights, after all, is that some things cannot be left to the give
welfare or wealth maximization trumps low prices. Despite the admittedly enormous recent influence of economics on the courts, cases that take a position on
intrinsic merits of the trustee model, it should come as little surprise that trumpeting it to the voters is a poor electoral strategy. Ordinary people