| United States. Supreme Court - Law reports, digests, etc - 1936 - 1044 pages
...numbers in the community. Because of their nature and extent these are public problems. A generation ago they were for the individual to solve; today they...imposition upon it of the cost of its industrial accidents. See New York Central R. Co. v. White, supra; Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington, 243 US 219. STONE,... | |
| United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics - Labor - 1937 - 1726 pages
...numbers in the community. Because of their nature and extent these are public problems. A generation ago they were for the individual to solve ; today they...solution by requiring an industry to bear the subsistence costs of the labor which it employs, than to the imposition upon it of the cost of its industrial accidents.... | |
| Dexter Perkins - Biography & Autobiography - 1957 - 210 pages
...numbers of the community. Because of their nature and extent these are public problems. A generation ago they were for the individual to solve; today they are the burden of the nation." The minimum wage decision aroused much public criticism. In conjunction with the Adkins case (which... | |
| Howard Gillman - Law - 1993 - 336 pages
...Stone added, "I can perceive no more objection, on constitutional grounds, to [laws which require] an industry to bear the subsistence cost of the labor...upon it of the cost of its industrial accidents." 77 (Of course, the response to this point would be that traditional police powers jurisprudence had... | |
| Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy - United States - 1997 - 615 pages
...in the community. Because of their nature and extent, these are public problems. A generation ago, they were for the individual to solve. Today they...perceive no more objection on constitutional grounds -- their solution by requiring industry to bear the subsistence cost upon -- of the labor which it... | |
| William M. Wiecek - History - 2006 - 760 pages
...numbers in the community. Because of their nature and extent these are public problems. A generation ago they were for the individual to solve; to-day they are the burden of the nation." Stone concluded his Morehead dissent on a Holmesian note: "the Fourteenth Amendment has no more embedded... | |
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