I say over a century because the web references refer to late Nineteenth Century «Perhaps its most influential and valuable contribution was its late 19th - century invention of the Key Number System, a means of methodically organizing and summarizing the thousands of
judicial rulings delivered each year.
Not exact matches
Without such a further shift in culture of the kind engendered by Lord Woolf, coupled with adequate
judicial resources and administrative support for the civil court system, it is difficult to see further
rule changes alone achieving what Lord Woolf desired but which for large and complex claims his reforms failed ultimately to
deliver.
However, Gall and Kimbrough ultimately have more to do with
judicial discretion and appellate review than with the Sixth Amendment, and back in 1996 the Court came together in Koon to
deliver a unanimous
ruling (per Justice Kennedy) that embraced broader district court sentencing discretion and light appellate review.