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- Title
The Case of William Dick: Ransom County, North Dakota.
- Authors
BRIGHT, MYRON H.
- Abstract
In May 2009, a decision of the United States Supreme Court with North Dakota roots turned fifty years old. A case unique in the annals of the law, Dick v. New York Life Insurance Company 1 still fascinates lawyers today. Factually, the case presented a strange question: could an experienced hunter accidentally shoot himself not once, but twice? Some of North Dakota's finest lawyers, including Philip Vogel, Donald Holand, and Norman Tenneson, aimed to get to the bottom of that matter. The judges were equally impressive: Judge Ronald Davies of the federal district court; Judge John Sanborn of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit; and Chief Justice Earl Warren and Justice Felix Frankfurter. Finally, as a matter of Supreme Court jurisprudence, Dick may have been the last time the High Court granted a petition for certiorari in a case that turned almost exclusively on questions of fact. In honor of its golden anniversary, this article recounts the captivating story of Dick v. New York Life.
- Subjects
UNITED States; DICK v. New York Life Insurance Co. (Supreme Court case); DICK, William; CERTIORARI; LIFE insurance laws; LIFE insurance; DOUBLE indemnity; PROOF &; certification of death; HOLAND, Donald; VOGEL, Philip B.; LEGAL history; UNITED States. Supreme Court
- Publication
Journal of Supreme Court History, 2010, Vol 35, Issue 1, p25
- ISSN
1059-4329
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1353/sch.2010.0024