| 1952 - 1286 páginas
...and fixing wages and working conditions in certain 8 YOUNGSTOWN CO. v. SAWYER. fields of our economy. The Constitution does not subject this law-making...to presidential or military supervision or control. It is said that other Presidents without congressional authority have taken possession of private business... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs - 1953 - 1468 páginas
...of Congress to adopt such public policies as those proclaimed by the order is beyond question. * * * The Constitution does not subject this lawmaking power...to Presidential or military supervision or control. The Supreme Court has said the same thing Avith reference to these submerged lands in its opinion in... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary - 1954 - 38 páginas
...to settle labor disputes, and fixing wages and working conditions in certain fields of our economy. The Constitution does not subject this lawmaking power...presidential or military supervision or control." [Emphasis added.] The opinion of the Court, briefly stated above, would seem on its face to be a flat... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary - 1954 - 50 páginas
...to settle labor disputes, and fixing wages and working conditions in certain fields of our economy. The Constitution does not subject this lawmaking power...presidential or military supervision or control." [Emphasis added.] The opinion of the Court, briefly stated above, would seem on its face to be a flat... | |
| Wayne Leslie McNaughton, Joseph Lazar - 1954 - 554 páginas
...Supreme Court held that the seizure order was in the category of lawmaking and that "the Constitution did not subject this law-making power of Congress to presidential or military supervision or control. . . . The founders of this nation entrusted the law-making power to the Congress alone in both good... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1955 - 1080 páginas
...shall make laws which the President is to execute [citing art. I, sec. 1 of the Constitution] * * *. The Constitution does not subject this lawmaking power...to Presidential or military supervision or control" (pp. 587, 588) and Mr. Justice Jackson said: "But no doctrine that the Court could promulgate would... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Government Operations - 1957 - 234 páginas
...to settle labor disputes, and fixing wages and working conditions in certain fields of our economy. The Constitution does not subject this lawmaking power...to presidential or military supervision or control. It is said that other Presidents without congressional authority have taken possession of private business... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1960 - 988 páginas
...such implied authority. The Court said, ditions in certain fields in our economy. The Constitution did not subject this law-making power of Congress to presidential or military supervision or control. Inasmuch as the authority of the respondents, under the guise of granting or denying clearance for... | |
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