United States Court of Appeals for Administration: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Seventy-fifth Congress, Third Session, on S. 3676, a Bill to Establish a United States Court of Appeals for Administration to Receive, Decide, and Expedite Appeals from Federal Commissions, Administrative Authorities, and Tribunals in which the United States is a Party Or Has an Interest and for Other Purposes...

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Page 120 - And the eye cannot say unto the hand, I have no need of thee : nor again the head to the feet, I have no need of you.
Page 122 - Ministers as the best remedy for the defects of the existing system to which our terms of reference are directed. We have considered their expediency, but interesting as they are, we cannot recommend their adoption; in our view they are inconsistent with the sovereignty of Parliament and the supremacy of the Law.
Page 113 - Congress making elaborate provision for a United States Court of Appeals for Administration "to receive, decide, and expedite appeals from federal commissions, administrative authorities, and tribunals in which the United States is a party or has an interest, and for other purposes.
Page 121 - Harrison's act being on the part of military authorities, then it becomes a belligerent seizure, for which compensation lies, not as a matter of right but as a matter of grace.
Page 135 - ... either be accomplished within the administrative agency by a separate and distinct body of men acting as judges, or by permitting an appeal to a court on the same basis as an appeal in equity or in admiralty, or by both processes. Such a system has worked successfully in tax appeals and eisewhere.
Page 135 - System t (1938) 24 Am. Bar Ass'n J., 267), also dealt with the inevitableness of the administrative process in modern American life and stressed the imperative need for certain safeguards against abuse of the exercise of quasi-judicial powers of administrators. He concluded : "To what does this all lead? Clearly, to this simple conclusion — that the exercise of the judicial process requires certain safeguards in the twentieth century just as it did in the sixteenth under the Stuarts, and in the...
Page 115 - I have been a member of the administrative law committee of the American Bar Association, and I am chairman of the committee on administrative law of the Minnesota Bar Association.
Page 144 - Rico is a party in the circuit court of appeals and the Supreme Court of the United States are being most efficiently prepared and argued by Mai.
Page 141 - September 1, 1952, and submitted to the house of delegates of the American Bar Association in...
Page 122 - A system of administrative law and administrative judges (ie, analogous to the French system) should not be established...

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