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Today in Supreme Court History: October 1

  • Writer: captcrisis
    captcrisis
  • Sep 30
  • 1 min read

United States v. Peck, 102 U.S. 64 (decided October 1, 1880): parol evidence (i.e., evidence outside the four corners of the contract) admissible to show that contract for providing wood and hay to army contemplated that hay would be cut in the area (supplier was unable to do that and government had others provide it from far away and charged him for the extra expense)


United States v. Carll, 105 U.S. 611 (decided October 1, 1881): can’t convict someone passing a counterfeit currency when the indictment didn’t mention that he knew it was counterfeit


White v. Lumpkin, 145 S.Ct. 115 (decided October 1, 2024): denies stay of execution; Defendant, former football star, murdered five people in the 1980s, and had confessed, but filed various habeas petitions alleging intellectual disability, “cocaine psychosis”, etc.; executed by lethal injection later that day

 
 
 

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