Monday, November 25, 2019
Business Law Essays - Types Of Business Entity, Business Law
Business Law Essays - Types Of Business Entity, Business Law    Business Law  Final Exam     1. John owned a cat which wandered into his yard. John was charged with  violating a local ordinance which read: "It shall be illegal to permits cows,  horses, goats, or other animals to wander about in a yard that is not property  fenced." The ordinance had been passed over fifty years ago when wandering  animals destroyed neighbor's crops. Is John guilty of violating this   ordinance? Using two techniques of statutory interpretation, discuss.    2.Suppose that Perry sues Davis on the theory that Davis is so ugly Perry  suffers intense emotional distress in his presence. Davis thinks correctly   that there is no rule of law allowing Perry to recover. What procedural device  should Davis use in this circumstance? Describe.    3.The local city council adopted an ordinance restricting the local skating  rink to persons under 16 years of age. Plaintiffs challenged the ordinance  under the equal protection clause of the 14th amendment. Under the holding in  the Stanglin case in your text, what results and why?    4.Suppose that someone argues that, contrary to popular belief, corporate  decision-making is almost completely irrational. If by chance this assertion  were true, it would undermine two major arguments made by defenders of the  corporation. What are these arguments and how would the assertion undermine  them? (One of your answers would probably trouble "corporate reformers" as  well.)    5.Acting pursuant to a warrant obtained upon a sufficient showing of probable  cause, Officer Beau Bogus arrested Earl Sleazeman for the crime of murder.  Officer Bogus neglected to give Sleazeman the Miranda warnings at the time of  the arrest or at any time thereafter. During "booking" at the police station,  Officer Bogus required an unwilling Sleazeman to submit to fingerprinting.  (Information obtained through the fingerprinting process ultimately proved  useful, because the police discovered Sleazeman's fingerprints on the door   know  to the front door of the house where the dead body of the murder victim had  been found). After booking was completed, Officer Bogus and Detective Harriet  Dirty interrogated Sleazeman  still without the Miranda warnings ever having  been given  at the police station. During the course of the interrogation,  Sleazeman confessed to the murder for which he had been arrested. Sleazeman  later retained attorney Nola Contendere to represent him in the murder case.  She has filed, on Sleazeman's behalf, a motion to suppress (i.e., motion  requesting a court order excluding certain evidence) in which she argues that  the fingerprinting of Sleazeman and the interrogation of him violated his   Fifth  Amendment rights and his Miranda rights. Sleazeman's attorney argues,  therefore, that the exclusionary rule should be applied, as to prevent the  state from using the following evidence against Sleazeman: (a) any evidence  derived from the fingerprinting that took place during booking; and (b)  Sleazeman's confession. Is Sleazeman's attorney correct in her arguments that  Sleazeman's Fifth Amendment rights and Miranda rights were violated? Why or   why  not? As to the evidence listed above as (a) and (b), mentioned in Sleazeman's  attorney's motion to suppress, state whether the exclusionary rule would  prevent the prosecution from using that evidence against Sleazeman? Explain  your reasoning.    6.Jed's roommates played a trick on him by abducting him from his room and  tying him up in his underwear on his girlfriend's porch. Jed, who was  intoxicated, slept through the whole incident and didn't wake up until the   next  morning, after his girlfriend had untied him and dressed him. Under what legal  theories, if any, is Jed entitled to recover damages from his "friends" under  these facts?     7. What are four factors courts consider in determining whether an activity   is  "abnormally dangerous" for purpose of strict liability?    8.In 1955, Merton, an English professor, wrote a book of poetry which he  copyrighted. 340 copies were sold nationwide. In 1975, the Pink Punk, a rock  band, recorded a song with lyrics exactly like the words of one of Merton's  poems. The poem occupied one page in a 112 page book. If Merton sues Pink Punk  for copyright infringements, and Pink Punk employs a fair use defense, which  two factors are most likely to help the group?     9. It has been said that one of the major factors which influenced the  evolution of modern contract law was the fact that, in the later decades of   the  nineteenth century, an increasingly large number of transactions no longer  resembled the stereotypical transaction envisioned by classical contract law.  Explain this statement, contrasting classical contract law's assumptions with  latter day reality.     10.Over a period of several months, ABC Manufacturing Company and XYZ   Plumbing  Supply have been negotiating over the sale of copper tubing. They have reached  an    
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