Buy a new version of this textbook and receive access to the Connected eBook with Study Center on CasebookConnect, lifetime access to the online ebook with highlight, annotation, and search capabilities; practice questions from your favorite study aids; an outline tool and other helpful resources . Connected eBooks provide what you need most to be successful in your law school classes. Learn more about Connected eBooks Hailed as one of the best casebooks in legal education, the text combines interesting cases, thoughtful analysis, notes, images, and a clear organization for an excellent teaching tool. Retaining the late Jesse Dukeminier’s blend of wit, erudition, and playfulness, the Tenth Edition uses cartoons, illustrations, case documents, and photographs to provide visual commentary that augments the wide-ranging cases and other readings. Sidebars on relevant but unique persons, places, and events provide thought-provoking and fascinating context. This casebook is not only fun to read, but fun for professors to teach. A thorough Teacher’s Manual with a comprehensive transition guide provides a complete teaching summary of all materials in the book. Updated PowerPoint slides with a refreshed design provide structure for classroom organization. New to the Tenth
Best law school textbook so far. Tons of unnecessary gossipy footnotes, which I loved. Ex. "this guy's nephew professionally de-snaked dogs." "this lady was married 4 times to 4 crazy men and blew all her money on seances." Obviously paraphrased but you get the picture. Definitely don't skip the footnotes if you have to read this book for class.
Pretty fun, actually. The chapters on powers of appointment and wealth transfer taxation made me want to fling myself off a cliff but the other chapters were fairly readable and the little inserts with details about the backgrounds of the parties and judges and cases were a lot of fun.
It is a great book. In preparation of your estate documents, it is vital that you have an understanding of what you want and how you can get it.
Don't do it yourself. Paying an attorney to write the documents will cost you hundreds, maybe thousands - but you know what the cost is right now. So it is a fixed and controllable expenditure. Shop around. find an attorney who can do what you want at a fair price.
If you do it yourself, no one will find your mistakes until you are dead. Fixing the mistakes you made may cost your heirs $1,000s, TENS of thousands, maybe HUNDREDS of thousands of dollars. Fixing the mistakes will come at an incredible cost in time, money and frustration for your heirs. It will involve the courts and dealing with the IRS! The old saying: "The attorney who represents himself has a fool for a client."
This was surprisingly enjoyable, as far as case books go! Each chapter was filled with small narrative style portions to make it as readable as possible. The cases were interesting and illustrated the points well.
I think that the content was pretty light though, obviously geared toward beginners and students.
I looked forward to the footnotes in each chapter!
I'm with Meg on this one, this was pretty good as casebooks go. I almost fell out of my chair when I saw that it had pictures - even a full color plate of a Mark Rothko painting!
this is actually pretty good for a textbook. i enjoy the pictures and editor's footnotes about the background of the crazy people involved in the cases. it makes the cases more interesting.
Apparently the Bolsheviks got rid of inheritance altogether in 1918 but had to bring it back four years later because the abolition caused too much political unrest.