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27 U. Mem. L. Rev. 333 (1996-1997)
Reopening Tennessee's Open Courts Clause: A Historical Reconsideration of Article I, Section 17 of the Tennessee Constitution

handle is hein.journals/umem27 and id is 343 raw text is: Reopening Tennessee's Open Courts
Clause: A Historical Reconsideration
of Article I, Section 17 of the
Tennessee Constitution
WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR.*
I.     INTRODUCTION ............................... 335
II.     PRINCIPLES OF CONSTITUTIONAL INTERPRETATION               342
III.    ORIGINS IN MAGNA CARTA          ..............            349
IV.     THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF COKE AND BLACKSTONE                  357
V.      MAGNA CARTA IN COLONIAL AMERICA ......... 364
VI.     EARLY STATE CONSTITUTIONS .............                   366
VII.    THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION AND
BILL OF RIGHTS      .....................                 368
VIII.   EARLY CONSTITUTIONALISM        IN TENNESSEE .....         375
IX.     THE TENNESSEE CONSTITUTION OF 1796            ......      381
X.      THE TENNESSEE CONSTITUTION OF 1835            ......      390
XI.     THE TENNESSEE CONSTITUTION OF 1870            ......      395
*   Judge, Tennessee Court of Appeals; B.A., Trinity College 1969; J.D., Vanderbilt
University 1972; LL.M., University of Virginia 1996.
This Article is adapted from a thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the require-
ments for the degree of Master of Laws in Judicial Process at the University of Virgin-
ia. The Author wishes to acknowledge the assistance of A.E. Dick Howard, White
Burkett Miller Professor of Law and Public Affairs at the University of Virginia, who
served as his thesis advisor. The Author also wishes to thank Susan W. Dulin and Eliz-
abeth Ann Hurd for their assistance in the preparation of the original manuscript.
This Article uses citation forms for state constitutions as a matter of style in the
text. Additionally, this Article includes parallel citations to Tennessee cases where
applicable as an aid to Tennessee practitioners.
This Article contains the Author's personal views and should not be construed as a
probable decision of any particular case or matter that may come before the Tennessee
Court of Appeals.

333

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