| 1907 - 728 páginas
...broader standpoint than that of the Interstate Commerce Act alone. The authors consider the common law rules, the state statutory regulations, the Interstate...which are at the very foundation of this subject. To give sound advice, the common law, the state constitutions and statutes, and the national Constitution... | |
| 1916 - 412 páginas
...securing, if they can, the abrogation of the rules of valuation and of law which are to be found in the decisions of the Interstate Commerce Commission and the decisions of the public service commissions in this country, and in the ordinary report of the courts of law. " In one... | |
| Library of Congress. Division of Bibliography - 1907 - 136 páginas
...broader standpoint than that of the Interstate Commerce Act alone. The authors consider the common law rules, the state statutory regulations, the Interstate...a work is due to the Interstate Act Amendments of 1006, the age of all works on the subject, except those of Suyder and Judsou, and the fact that they... | |
| Railroad Commission of Ohio - 1907 - 876 páginas
...Lancaster and Columbus on the ground of competition. In the arguments, counsel referred frequently to the decisions of the Interstate Commerce Commission and the decisions of the federal courts bearing upon the right of a carrier to consider competition as a factor in rate-making.... | |
| Railroad Commission of Ohio - 1907 - 878 páginas
...Lancaster and Columbus on the ground of competition. In the arguments, counsel referred frequently to the decisions of the Interstate Commerce Commission and the decisions of the federal courts bearing upon the right of a carrier to consider competition as a factor in rate-making.... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Interstate Commerce - 1936 - 658 páginas
...here as an expert witness. I am giving the experience of all the intermountain country as shown by the decisions of the Interstate Commerce Commission and the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States. Senator DIETERICH. Now, Mr. Chairman, that leads me to think, and... | |
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