Alphabet Trucks

More details about Eric Tabuchi’s 2008 art project are available here.

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Friday funnies …

… if you have ever had to take a “conlaw” class.

“Supreme Court Bracket” via xkcd.
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Postcards from Tampa

I visited Tampa, Florida last week to attend a jury trial (my wife Sydjia was co-counsel for the defense); here are some snapshots from our hotel, which was a former federal courthouse:

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Jean-Luc Godard forever

More details here and here.

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Texas Tuesday

Via u/Texas2Putts, check out this this amazing map showing all 254 county courthouses in the great State of Texas! More details here.

Texas Courthouses Photograph - 254 Texas County Courthouses by Chris Kortz
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More Monday music

If you are feeling somewhat somber or sad about recent events (e.g. the one-year anniversary of our disgraceful surrender to the Taliban or the death of a monarch in Europe), this haunting piece of music really captures the moment.

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Does history repeat itself?

On this day (11 September) in the year 9 A.D. the Romans suffer their greatest defeat at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest; thereafter the Rhine is established as the de facto border between the Roman Empire and the so-called barbarians for the next four hundred years.

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My one-page syllabus

Update (9/9): My students get to choose what topics we will discuss during the second half of my “Advanced Topics in Law” course, and based on the total number of votes, the most popular topics are as follows:
A. Transgender athletes and the law (10 votes).
B. Two-way tie: (i) small business firms/startups and (ii) abortion rights in the post Roe v. Wade world (8 votes each).
C. Three-way tie: (i) hostile takeovers and the law, (ii) new global tax treaty, and (iii) healthcare law (7 votes each).
I will update my syllabus to reflect these results.

F. E. Guerra-Pujol's avatarprior probability

Below is my one-page syllabus for a graduate-level course on “advanced business law topics” that I will be teaching this semester. During the first half of the semester, I am assigning two movies, “The Social Network” and “Blade Runner“; two documentaries, “Hot Coffee” and “Made You Look” (shout out to my T.A. Antonella for recommending “Made You Look” to me); and an episode (see here) from season 3 of the series “Entourage”. My students will select the topics to be covered during the second half of the semester.

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Coase’s four cases

Below is another extended excerpt (six paragraphs in all) from my latest work-in-progress “Coase’s pastoral parable” (footnotes omitted):

Among other things, Coase’s landmark social cost paper contains a careful and painstaking analysis of four English cases involving nuisance law: Sturges v. Bridgman, Cooke v. Forbes, Bryant v. Lefever, and Bass v. Gregory. The plaintiffs in these four nuisance cases sued their neighbors for damages and injunctive relief, but only two of the plaintiffs prevailed in court, while the other two lost. Why did the courts allow some harms to continue and enjoin others?

Before proceeding any further, however, I want to pose a much different question–a methodological query, to be more precise. In short, of all the millions of reported cases in the common law universe, why did Coase choose these four cases? As it happens, Coase may have decided to focus on these particular cases for several reasons:

1. Business narratives. First off, Coase’s social cost paper is primarily “concerned with those activities of business firms [that] have harmful effects on others,” so Coase needs cases involving business activities. As it happens, Coase’s “four actual cases” feature a wide variety of business firms, including a noisy confectioner, a carpet weaver, a gas works, and a pub or “public house.”

2. Homage to Arnold Plant. Secondly, Coase may have already been familiar with these four cases since his student days at the London School of Economics, where Coase attended a seminar on industrial law taught by Arnold Plant [pictured below] during the 1930-31 academic year.

3. Hard cases. Thirdly, these are all “hard cases” in the Dworkian or jurisprudential sense; that is, plausible legal arguments are available to both sides in each of these legal disputes.

But the most important feature of these particular cases–the main reason why Coase decided to devote extra time and space to them–is the reciprocal nature of the harms alleged in them: the plaintiff, the party alleging the injury, is just as responsible for the harm caused as the defendantis, the party being sued for causing the injury.

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