Briefs
Found in 9 Collections and/or Records:
Chester T. Lane briefs
Collection Identifier: HOLLIS 9343291This collection is made up of nine volumes entitled U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission: Briefs in cases involving statutes administered by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Judge Eli Shelby Hammond briefs
Collection Identifier: HOLLIS 4380567This 14-volume collection of briefs, arguments, and court documents was collected by Judge E.S. Hammond (W.D. Tenn.) over the course of his career at the bar and on the bench.
Papers of Catharine A. MacKinnon, 1946-2008 (inclusive), 1975-2005 (bulk)
Papers and audiovisual material of writer, scholar, lawyer, anti-pornography and women's rights activist Catharine A. MacKinnon contain school papers, correspondence, writing and research, teaching material, and legal client files.
Papers of Pauli Murray, 1827-1985
Correspondence, writings, photographs, etc., of Pauli Murray, lawyer, activist, and first African-American woman ordained as an Episcopal priest.
Nason & Proctor briefs
Collection Identifier: HOLLIS 9347103This collection consists of seven volumes of Massachusetts court documents, mostly briefs in matters of tort and contract law, filed on behalf of Nason & Proctor's Boston-area clients.
Papers of Morris Leopold Ernst, 1933-1937
Correspondence, trial and appeal material, other legal papers, etc., of Morris Leopold Ernst, lawyer who represented physician Hannah Stone in a 1930s case about the importation of contraceptives.
Papers of Sandi E. Cooper, 1969-1988
Photocopies of trial briefs, depositions, trial transcripts from a 1984 sex discrimination case against Sears, Roebuck & Co. in which Sandi E. Cooper, history professor, testified.
Papers of Justine Wise Polier, 1892-2015
Correspondence, reports, oral histories, photographs, etc., of Justine Wise Polier, judge and authority on juvenile justice.
William Henry Coolidge briefs
Collection Identifier: HOLLIS 9344895This is a collection of briefs in cases argued by Coolidge and others in the state and federal courts of New England. The cases frequently relate to railroads.