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Thomas McIntyre Cooley (January 6, 1824 – September 12, 1898) was an American judge. He was the 25th Justice and a Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, between 1864 and 1885.
The Thomas M. Cooley Law School was established by a group of lawyers and judges led by Thomas E. Brennan, a former Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court (from 1969–1970). The school was named in honor of Thomas McIntyre Cooley (1824–1898), a prominent 19th-century jurist, who was also a former Michigan Supreme Court Chief Justice ...
Thomas M. Cooley High School is an abandoned high school located at the intersection of Hubbell Avenue and Chalfonte Street, on the northwest side of Detroit, Michigan. The three-story, Mediterranean Revival -style facility opened its doors on September 4, 1928.
Thomas Cooley may refer to: Thomas Cooley (architect) (1740–1784), Irish architect; Thomas F. Cooley (1943–2021), American professor of economics at the New York University Stern School of Business; Thomas M. Cooley (1824–1898), Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court; Thomas Benton Cooley (1871–1945), his son, American pediatrician ...
No. Chief Justice Tenure as Chief Justice Tenure on Supreme Court 1: William A. Fletcher: 1836–1842: 1836–1842 2: George Morell: 1842–1843: 1836–1843
Writing for the majority, Justice Thomas M. Cooley struck down the law on the grounds that railroads were a private enterprise and the public funding thereof violated the Michigan constitution. Cooley enunciated three principles which formed the basis of taxation: [8] It must be used for a public purpose.
Thomas E. Brennan (May 27, 1929 – September 29, 2018) was an American attorney, jurist, and academic administrator who was the founder of Thomas M. Cooley Law School and the 81st Justice and chief justice of the Michigan Supreme Court.
The idea of an unconstitutional constitutional amendment has been around since at least the 1890s—with it being embraced by former Michigan Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas M. Cooley in 1893 [4] and US law professor Arthur Machen in 1910 (in Machen's case, in arguing that the Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution might be ...