Civil procedure /
Joseph W. Glannon
- Séptima edición
- New York : Wolters Kluwer Law & Business, 2013
- xvii, 730 páginas : ilustraciones, mapas
- Examples & explanations .
Incluye índice
1. Personal jurisdiction : the enigma of minimum contacts | 2. Statutory limits on personal jurisdiction : the reach and grasp of the long-arm | 3. Seeking the home field advantage : challenges to personal jurisdiction | 4. Federal questions and federal cases : jurisdiction over cases "arising under" federal law | 5. Diversity jurisdiction : when does multiplicity constitute diversity? | 6. Personal and subject matter jurisdiction compared : the first two rings | 7. Second guessing the plaintiff's choice of forum: removal | 8. Proper venue in federal courts: a rough measure of convenience | 9. Choosing a proper court: the three rings reconsidered | 10. Easy Erie: the law of Rome and Athens | 11. Eerie Erie: the substance/substance distinction | 12. Erie and state choice of law: vertical uniformity and horizontal chaos | 13. Sculpting the lawsuit: the basic rules of joinder | 14. Into the labyrinth: joinder of parties under rule 14 | 15. Essentials and interlopers: joinder of parties under rules 19 and 25 | 16. Jurisdictional fellow travelers: supplemental jurisdiction | 17. Jurisdiction vs. joinder: the difference between power and permission | 18. The bearer of bad tidings: service of process in the federal courts | 19. Getting off easy: the motion to dismiss | 20. When justice so requires: amendments to pleadings under the Federal Rules | 21. The scope of discovery: the rules giveth, and the rules taketh away | 22. Tools of the trade: the basic methods of discovery | 23. Defective allegation or insufficient proof: dismissal for failure to state a claim compared to summary judgment | 24. The judge and the jury, part one: judgment as a matter of law (directed verdict) | 25. The judge and the jury, part two: whose case is this, anyway? | 26. Res judicata: the limits of procedural liberality | 27. Res judicata and the rules of joinder: when does may mean must? | 28. Collateral estoppel: fine-tuning the preclusion doctrine | 29. The obscure kingdom: nonmutual collateral estoppel | 30. An introduction to the pretrial litigation process: setting the stage for the Schulansky case | 31. First moves: Schulansky goes to court | 32. A change of forum: Ronan removes to federal court | 33. The defendants' perspective: Ronan's answer and counterclaim | 34. Chain reaction: Ronan brings in Jones | 35. Preliminary objections: Jones seeks a way out |