The Handy Law Answer Book: Understanding the Law; Navigating the Legal System (The Handy Answer Book Series) - Softcover

Hudson Jr. J.D., David L.

 
9781578595921: The Handy Law Answer Book: Understanding the Law; Navigating the Legal System (The Handy Answer Book Series)

Inhaltsangabe

Courtrooms and contracts. Legal claims and criminal cases. The legal system can be complex, but you’ll be at an advantage with this enlightening guide by your side!

Understanding the law and navigating the legal system has never been more important. From the day you are born and get your government-issued birth certificate to finding a job and paying your taxes to your eventual death certificate, legal documents, legal rights and responsibilities, and the law are an inescapable part of our lives. Fully revised and updated to include an expanded and up-to-date understanding of individual rights and personal liberties—from the Bill of Rights to the Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade—as well as an all-new chapter on immigration law, The Handy Law Answer Book 2nd edition answers over 750 of the most important, intriguing, and interesting legal questions many of us face, including …

  • What was the pressing need for the Constitution?
  • What is an example of a separation of powers problem?
  • How is a law created?
  • Why were the first ten amendments—the Bill of Rights—added to the U.S. Constitution?
  • What three freedoms does the Eighth Amendment protect?
  • How was the U.S. Supreme Court created?
  • What president ordered a commission to study various reform proposals to the U.S. Supreme Court?
  • How does tort law differ from criminal law?
  • Are children held to the same standards as adults?
  • What was the McDonald’s hot coffee case?
  • Can employers really discriminate against employees for any reason?
  • How does an employee prove a claim of religious discrimination?
  • If you are fired from your job, can you obtain unemployment benefits coverage?
  • What is an arrest?
  • How do you qualify for a court-appointed attorney?
  • What happens if a jury cannot reach a decision?
  • Can cousins legally marry?
  • What happens if a person refuses to pay child support?
  • How long does negative information stay on my credit report?
  • What is a credit freeze?
  • What does it cost to file for bankruptcy?
  • How does one become a U.S. citizen?
  • How can a person obtain asylum?
  • And many, many more!

  • Completely revised and updated for the first time in 15 years, The Handy Law Answer Book incorporates the latest Supreme Court rulings and their views on the Constitution, employment law, criminal law, family law, bankruptcy, affirmative action, Presidential immunity, same-sex marriage, and much, much more. Whether you’re in your living room or law school, this compelling resource will inform you of the basics of the law and legal principles. It will arm you with the knowledge you need to navigate and understand our system of justice!

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    Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

    David L. Hudson Jr., J.D., is an attorney and law professor at Belmont University’s College of Law, a U.S. Constitution scholar, and a fellow for the First Amendment of the Freedom Forum. Hudson earned his undergraduate degree from Duke University and his law degree from Vanderbilt Law School. He speaks widely on Constitutional Law and school law issues. He previously taught classes at Vanderbilt Law School and the Nashville School of Law, where he was awarded its Distinguished Faculty Award. He also served as a senior law clerk for the Tennessee Supreme Court. He is an author, co-author, or co-editor of more than 40 books, including Visible Ink Press’s The Handy Civics Answer Book, The Constitution Explained: A Guide for Every American and The Handy Supreme Court Answer Book: The History and Issues Explained. He writes regularly for the American Bar Association’s Preview of United States Supreme Court Cases and ABA Journal. He lives in Nashville, Tennessee.

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    EMPLOYMENT LAW

    At-will Employment

    What legal doctrine still provides the baseline rule that employees have little protection in the employment relationship in the United States?

    Many workers must accept the fact that they are “at-will” employees subject to the employment-at-will doctrine. This doctrine provides that either the employer or employee can end the employment relationship at will—even for a seemingly unfair reason. The Tennessee Supreme Court explained the doctrine in Payne v. Western & Atlantic R. Co. (1884): “All may dismiss their employees at will, be they many or few, for good cause, for no cause or even for cause morally wrong without being thereby guilty of legal wrong.” Under the employment-at-will doctrine, an employer can dismiss an employee for a good reason, bad reason, or no reason at all. The reasoning behind the rule is that because an employee can leave the employment relationship at any time, the employer should have the same right to terminate the relationship at will. Unfortunately, the rule does not take into consideration the power disparity between most employers and employees. An employer often can easily replace an employee, while an employee often has a much more difficult time finding a comparable job.

    Much of current employment law deals with whether various exceptions to the employment-at-will doctrine apply. For example, employers (with a certain number of employees) cannot fire workers for certain discriminatory reasons—because of the employees’ race, sex, or religion. There also have developed many so-called public policy exceptions to the employment-at-will doctrine. Common public policy exceptions to the employment-at-will doctrine are that employers may not fire workers for serving on a jury, exposing illegal activities by the employer in the workplace, filing a workers’ compensation claim, or having your wages garnished.

    What broad categories of workers are not subject to the employment-at-will doctrine?

    Workers who have an employment relationship governed by a contract called a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) generally are not subject to the employment-at-will doctrine. The CBA is a contract of the employment relationship between the workers, usually represented by a union, and the management of the employer. Workers under a CBA are not subject to the harsh rule of employment-at-will because a common goal for unions in their negotiations with management is to include a just-cause provision in the CBA, which is the governing contract that controls the parameters of the employment relationship. A just-cause clause provides that an employer shall not fire a worker except for just cause—a very good or justifiable reason.

    Sometimes workers who do not work at a large plant with a collective bargaining agreement still are not subject to the employment-at-will doctrine because they have signed an employment contract. This means that a worker who has a valid employment contract is often not subject to the employment-at-will doctrine. Rather, the employee is subject to the terms and conditions of the signed contract. Most workers, however, are not protected by a specific contract. If there is not an agreement that serves as the guide to the employer-employee relationship, the default rule in many states is the employment-at-will doctrine.

    Can the employee handbook that an employer hands out to you constitute a valid contract that binds the employer?

    It depends. Courts in some states recognize a so-called “handbook exception” to employment at will, which means that the employer can create a contract by making certain promises and offers in the employee handbook. For example, some courts have determined that employee handbooks that make statements providing a form of job security for employees can alter the employment-at-will relationship. The Michigan Supreme Court first recognized the handbook exception to the employment-at-will doctrine in 1980.

    Other states hold that an employee handbook cannot convert an at-will employment relationship into a contractual relationship. Many courts have determined that the employee handbook must set forth a clear promise which the employees view as an offer in order to be viewed as an enforceable contract. Many times employers will include a statement in the handbook which expressly disclaims the intention to create any sort of contract. Often these statements say that the employer reserves the right to unilaterally change any provisions in the handbook. Here is one such sample statement: “I UNDERSTAND THAT THIS HANDBOOK IS A GENERAL GUIDE AND THAT THE PROVISIONS OF THIS HANDBOOK DO NOT CONSTITUTE AN EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT (CONTRACT) OR A GUARANTEE OF CONTINUED EMPLOYMENT.”

    How did the employment-at-will doctrine originate in the United States?

    In England, the common rule was the so-called English rule, which provided that employment should be presumed for a year or through the respective season. This was a rule that provided a degree of protection to workers even when there was not the highest demand for labor. However, American employers in the late 1800s shifted focus to the at-will rule, perhaps as a way to compete in the growing industrial economy.

    Many scholars trace the employment-at-will rule to a New York-based legal writer named Horace Gay Wood, who wrote in his treatise Master and Servant (1877): “[T]he rule is inflexible, that a general or indefinite hiring is prima facie a hiring at will, and if the servant seeks to make it out a yearly hiring, the burden is upon him to establish it by proof.… It is competent for either party to show what the mutual understanding of the parties was in reference to the matter; but unless their understanding was mutual that the service was to extend for a certain fixed and definite period, it is an indefinite hiring and is determinable at the will of either party.” Wood’s rule was that the burden was on the employee to show that the employment relationship was not governed by the employment-at-will relationship.Wood’s statement of the employment-at-will doctrine became the norm in laws throughout the states, as various state high courts cited Wood’s treatise in adopting the doctrine. By the end of the 1930s, nearly every state had accepted the employment-at-will doctrine as the default rule in the employment setting.

    What if an employer offers lifetime or permanent employment? Does the employment-at-will doctrine still apply?

    Yes, in many jurisdictions the offer of permanent employment is considered to be for an indefinite term and the employment-at-will doctrine still applies. The offer of permanent employment is considered too indefinite to overcome the presumption that the employment-at-will doctrine applies.

    However, sometimes courts will recognize seemingly lifetime contracts. For example, in a famous case involving former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson and his former trainer Kevin Rooney, the New York Court of Appeals (the state’s highest court) found that an oral statement to Rooney that he could train the boxer “as long as he fights professionally” was a contract for a definite time period even though there was of course no guarantee as to how long Tyson would fight. The court concluded that “an oral contract between a fight trainer and a professional boxer to train the boxer ‘for as long as the boxer fights professionally’ is a contract for a definite duration.”

    How does a court determine a public policy exception to the at-will doctrine?

    Different state courts apply different rules to determine when there are public policy exceptions to the at-will...

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    9781578598724: The Handy Law Answer Book (The Handy Answer Book Series)

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    ISBN 10:  1578598729 ISBN 13:  9781578598724
    Verlag: Visible Ink Press, 2025
    Hardcover