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Dive into the research topics where Jed Handelsman Shugerman is active.

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Featured researches published by Jed Handelsman Shugerman.


Yale Law Journal | 2000

Joe Goldstein: "The Past Is Future"

Jed Handelsman Shugerman

In the standard historical interpretation of American tort law, the era of laissez-faire and pro-industry fault liability dominated the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, 1 and the mid-twentieth century marked the gradual rise of strict liability. 2 Scholars and judges presenting this narrative have focused on the reception of Fletcher v. Rylands , an English case from the 1860s in which a reservoir used for supplying water power to a textile mill burst into a neighbor’s underground mine shafts. In one of the most significant and controversial precedents in the strict liability canon, 4 the


Journal of Tort Law | 2008

A Watershed Moment: Reversals of Tort Theory in the Nineteenth Century

Jed Handelsman Shugerman

This article offers a new assessment of the stages in the development of fault and strict liability and their justifications in American history. Building from the evidence that a wide majority of state courts adopted Fletcher v. Rylands and strict liability for unnatural or hazardous activities in the late nineteenth century, a watershed moment turns to the surprising reversals in tort ideology in the wake of flooding disasters.An established view of American tort law is that the fault rule supposedly prevailed over strict liability in the nineteenth century, with some arguing that it was based on instrumental arguments to subsidize industry, while others claim that its basis was in the moral condemnation of wrongdoing as a principle of corrective justice. Courts supposedly did not embrace strict liability until the mid-twentieth century, driven by efficiency arguments. This article challenges the established view by setting forth three periods.In the first period from 1810 to 1860, instrumental and moral arguments were rare or non-existent, and instead, courts relied on simple assertions or minimalist citations to precedent in establishing a general negligence rule. In the second period (the 1870s and 1880s), American courts defended the general negligence rule with economic arguments not as a primary justification, but as a defense against the English challenge in Rylands. In the third period around the turn of the century, state judges, partly reacting in horror to the disastrous Johnstown Flood of 1889 and other unnatural modern threats, turned to strict liability with moralistic corrective justice arguments, not instrumental arguments. The cases from this last period illustrate a number of moral arguments in favor of strict liability: choice and duties; fairness (those who profit from an activity should pay those they hurt); a social contract argument of reciprocity; and a rights argument in favor of the natural user over the unnatural innovator. Instead of enterprise liability emerging from post-Great Depression/New Deal politics, from twentieth-century academics, or from engineers overlooking the factory floor, it gained significant ground in the late nineteenth century from the murky depths of a flooded Pennsylvania valley. This historical study of the dramatic twists and turns on Rylands suggests that tort doctrine and tort theory are contingent upon events and context.


Archive | 2012

The People's Courts: Pursuing Judicial Independence in America

Jed Handelsman Shugerman


Journal of the Early Republic | 2002

The Louisiana Purchase and South Carolina's Reopening of the Slave Trade in 1803

Jed Handelsman Shugerman


Harvard Law Review | 2010

Economic Crisis and the Rise of Judicial Elections and Judicial Review

Jed Handelsman Shugerman


Stanford Law Review | 2013

The Creation of the Department of Justice: Professionalization Without Civil Rights or Civil Service

Jed Handelsman Shugerman


Yale Law Journal | 2001

Unreasonable Probability of Error

Jed Handelsman Shugerman


Archive | 2018

Fiduciary Constitutionalism and ‘Faithful Execution’: Two Legal Conclusions

Ethan J. Leib; Jed Handelsman Shugerman


Archive | 2018

'Faithful Execution' and Article II

Andrew Kent; Ethan J. Leib; Jed Handelsman Shugerman


Archive | 2018

Emoluments, Zones of Interests, and Political Questions: A Cautionary Tale

Jed Handelsman Shugerman; Gautham Rao

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Dmitry Bam

University of Maine School of Law

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