Word: enjoins
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...suit last week was brought not by a bank but by one Frances Garfunkel, a stockholder in Manufacturers Trust Co. Miss Garfunkel hopes to enjoin the bank from paying some $375,000 in FDIC assessments. Pointing out that the suit involved no reflection on his management, President Harvey Dow Gibson declared: "Manufacturers Trust Co. is quite willing to have this question of legality authoritatively decided but meantime it will scrupulously comply with...
...spelled out. Standard of Indiana had been marketing "SO" oil & gas for 40 years. Therefore Standard of New Jersey, in advertising "Esso," was blatantly appropriating "without expense, fraudulently and unfairly, the goodwill, reputation, celebrity and public confidence which the plaintiff has built up." Mr. Seubert asked the court to enjoin the intruder from selling "Esso" products in any of the 14 states served by Standard of Indiana...
...predicated upon demonstrated determinations of fact. Of course, as your writer observes, the decision is "interpreted by each writer in accordance with his own political allegiance." But no one can deny that it comes as a welcome reminder that, if Congress is to set up administrative agencies it must enjoin upon them "a certain course of procedure" and that when such agencies are "required as a condition precedent to order, to make a finding of facts, the validity of the order must rest upon the needed findings." (Cited in the oil case opinion from "Wichita Railroad and Light...
Then came the Lord Chancellor's writ of summons in the King-Emperor's name: "We strictly enjoin and command you to be faithful to the allegiance by which you are bound...
...second judicial crack at President Roosevelt's recovery program by declaring the Agricultural Adjustment Act unconstitutional and thus supplying the long-awaited framework for an appeal to the Supreme Court. Before him was a case in which a group of Florida citrus fruit growers were suing to enjoin Secretary of Agriculture Wallace and the Agricultural Adjustment Administration's State control committee from enforcing proration regulations. "In the light of the Constitution, which I read once each week," said Judge Akerman, "the [AAA] act is so full of holes you could drive eight yoke of oxen through...