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吳家良 吳家良
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Posts: 522
Rep: 9 0
6 years ago
Assume that a state and the federal government hold concurrent jurisdiction over an issue and furthermore, both have enacted statutes to regulate the subject. However, the state statute is contrary to the federal law. The state law is:
 
  A) valid.
  B) invalid as preempted by the federal law under the Supremacy Clause.
  C) invalid as preempted by the Necessary and Proper Clause.
  D) invalid as violating the dormant Commerce Clause.

Q. 2

In determining whether a duty of care is owed to an unforeseeable plaintiff
 
  a. courts use the zone of danger test.
  b. courts use the world at large test.
  c. court use either the zone of danger test or the world at large test, depending on the jurisdiction.
  d. courts rule no duty of care is owed because the plaintiff is not foreseeable.

Q. 3

The special warranty deed presents the highest level of assurance to the buyer.
 
  A. True
   B. False

Q. 4

Negligence per se is an act or failure to act in violation of the state's constitution.
 
  Indicate whether the statement is true or false

Q. 5

The First Amendment provides for the freedom of speech.
 
  Indicate whether the statement is true or false

Q. 6

The ideas of which philosophers served as a basis for the founding of the U.S. constitution?
 
  What will be an ideal response?
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Replies
wrote...
6 years ago
(Answer to #1)  B

(Answer to #2)  c

(Answer to #3)  B

(Answer to #4)  FALSE

(Answer to #5)  TRUE

(Answer to #6)  The ideas of John Locke, Charles de Montesquieu, and Thomas Hobbes, including natural law theory, were a part of the delegates' collective political ideology. The natural law theories were later used by philosophers, such as John Locke and Charles Montesquieu, to advance theories of representative government, separation of powers, and use of the judiciary to protect individuals from governmental abuse. These philosophers advanced the theory that sovereignty rests not with the monarch but with the people. Natural law theories were the foundation of both the French Declaration of Rights and the French Revolution and their U.S. counterparts.
吳家良 Author
wrote...
6 years ago
Nice!
wrote...
6 years ago
Happy Dummy
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