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Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony

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To get property rights in a wild animal found on unowned property, you must be ... of the horn, and at peep of day, would mount his steed, and for hours together ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony


1
Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony 3 Eroica (1804)
  • Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
  • Karl Bohm, Conductor
  • Recorded 1972

2
Version of Substantive Holding
  • To get property rights in a wild animal found on
    unowned property, you must be the first to
    occupy it, which means you must do more than
    pursue it. ?
  • To get property rights in a wild animal found on
    unowned property, you must be the first to
    occupy it, which means you must take physical
    possession, mortally wound it, or capture it in a
    net or trap. ???

3
5. Holding and Dicta. How/when will you know for
sure whether language in case is dicta or part of
holding?
4
5. Holding and Dicta
  • After case comes down, often left with
    uncertainty as to exact scope of result.

5
5. Holding and Dicta
  • After case comes down, often left with
    uncertainty as to exact scope of result.
  • BUT
  • Need to counsel clients.

6
5. Holding and Dicta
  • After case comes down, often left with
    uncertainty as to exact scope of result.
  • BUT
  • Need to counsel clients.
  • Need to craft arguments in litigation.

7
RATIONALES
8
RATIONALES
  • Doctrinal Rationales Result required or
    strongly suggested by prior authorities

9
RATIONALES
  • Doctrinal Rationales Result required or
    strongly suggested by prior authorities
  • Policy Rationales Result is good for society

10
Pierson Kind of Case Where Policy Discussion
Likely/Useful
  • General agreement that property in animals ferae
    naturae created by first occupancy
  • No binding precedent on what that means
  • No consensus among treatise authors

11
Pierson Kind of Case Where Policy Discussion
Likely/Useful
  • DQs 6-9 Discuss Relevant Policy Rationales
  • Particularly note in context of choice between
    two proposed rules

12
TWO COMPETING RULES
  • Majority more than mere pursuit needed More
    than Pursuit
  • Dissent sufficient if pursuit inevitably and
    speedily would have terminated in corporal
    possession Hot Pursuit

13
DQ6. Certainty in Pierson
  • Majority says its rule promotes certainty
  • We are the more readily inclined to confine
    possession or occupancy of beasts ferae naturae,
    within the limits prescribed by the learned
    authors above cited, for the sake of certainty,
    and preserving peace and order in society.

14
DQ6. Certainty in Pierson
  • Majority Too Difficult to Determine How Much
    Pursuit is Hot Enough or Even if Theres
    Pursuit at All.

15
Sample Policy Rationale 1
  • The majority stated that its decision would
    provide certainty and preserve peace and
    order, presumably because it is difficult for a
    hunter that sees an animal to tell if another
    hunter is pursuing it, and, if pursuit was enough
    to create ownership, the resulting confusion
    would create quarrels and litigation

16
DQ6. Certainty in Pierson
  • Majority Too Difficult to Determine How Much
    Pursuit is Hot Enough or Even if Theres
    Pursuit at All.
  • BUT If mortal wounding creates property
    rights, how do you tell if a wound is mortal?

17
DQ6. Certainty Generally
  • Reduces Anxiety Related to Uncertainty
  • Allows Planning
  • Creates Stability
  • Majority Peace Order May Reduce Quarrels

18
DQ6. Certainty Generally
  • Reduces Anxiety Related to Uncertainty
  • Allows Planning
  • Creates Stability
  • Majority Peace Order May Reduce Quarrels
  • BUT these benefits may require that people be
    aware of the rule.

19
THREE KINDS OF CERTAINTY
  • Easy to apply at the time
  • Easy to apply in court
  • Everyone aware of rule

20
Concerns with Certainty
  • Admit all students with minimum LSAT in
    alphabetical order until class filled.
  • Or in reverse order of height.
  • Or in order of parents 2006 income.

21
Concerns with Certainty
  • Admit all students with minimum LSAT in
    alphabetical order until class filled.
  • Any student who fails to show up on time for the
    midterm fails the class.

22
Concerns with Certainty
  • Admit all students with minimum LSAT in
    alphabetical order until class filled.
  • Any student who fails to show up on time for
    midterm fails the class.
  • When property is owned jointly by a married
    couple, all management decisions will be made by
    the man.

23
DQ6. Certainty Generally
  • Reduces Anxiety Related to Uncertainty
  • Allows Planning
  • Creates Stability
  • Majority Peace Order May Reduce Quarrels
  • BUT Sometimes at cost of fairness or
    sensitivity to particular circumstances or
    awareness of changing times

24
BRIGHT-LINE RULES v. FLEXIBLE STANDARDS
25
DQ7. LABOR
  • The majority suggests that it will confer
    property rights on those who, using their
    industry and labor, have captured animals.

26
DQ7. LABOR
  • Encompassing and securing such animals with
    nets and toils, or otherwise intercepting them in
    such a manner as to deprive them of their natural
    liberty, and render escape impossible, may justly
    be deemed to give possession of them to those
    persons who, by their industry and labor, have
    used such means of apprehending them.

27
DQ7. LABOR
  • Generally Understood Good idea to provide
    rewards for industry labor as an incentive to
    encourage working hard.

28
DQ7. LABOR Are there some categories of
labor you would not want to reward?

29
DQ7. LABOR Are there some categories of labor
you would not want to reward?
  • Ineffective Labor
  • Harmful/Dangerous Labor
  • Related Problem Setting Optimal Reward

30
Sample Policy Rationale 2
  • The majority may have rejected the hot pursuit
    rule because they believed that labor expended
    hunting should not be rewarded until the hunter
    has achieved a tangible result such as actual
    occupancy or mortal wounding.

31
DQ7. LABOR
  • Suppose Post pays somebody to kill foxes for
    him? Who should get property in the foxes? Why?

32
DQ7. LABOR
  • Suppose Post pays somebody to kill foxes for him?
    Who should get property in the foxes? Why?
  • NOTE Law Commonly Equates
  • Investment of Labor
  • Investment of

33
TWO COMPETING RULES
  • Majority more than mere pursuit needed More
    than Pursuit
  • Dissent sufficient if pursuit inevitably and
    speedily would have terminated in corporal
    possession Hot Pursuit

34
DQ8. ECONOMIC BENEFITS
  • Our decision should have in view the greatest
    possible encouragement to the destruction of an
    animal, so cunning and ruthless in his career.
  • Why does the dissent think its hot pursuit rule
    will result in more foxes being killed?

35
DQ8. ECONOMIC BENEFITS
  • Who would keep a pack of hounds or what
    gentleman, at the sound of the horn, and at peep
    of day, would mount his steed, and for hours
    together ... pursue the windings of this wily
    quadruped, if just as night came on, and his
    stratagems and strength were nearly exhausted, a
    saucy intruder, who had not shared in the honors
    or labors of the chase, were permitted to come in
    at the death, and bear away in triumph the object
    of pursuit?

36
DQ8. ECONOMIC BENEFITS
  • Why does the dissent think its rule will result
    in more foxes being killed? Unhappy Posts Choose
    Alternative Activity
  • Argument that Majoritys Rule will result in
    more foxes being killed?

37
DQ8. ECONOMIC BENEFITS
  • Why does the dissent think its rule will result
    in more foxes being killed? Unhappy Posts Choose
    Alternative Activity
  • Argument that Majoritys Rule will result in more
    foxes being killed?
  • Posts Work Harder at Killing (cf. Whaling)

38
If you dont get expected reward for labor, what
happens?
  • Substitution Effect Choose different activity
    that pays more or costs less
  • OR
  • Income Effect Increase labor until you achieve
    desired reward
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