Thank you for the fun, if short eposide! I have a question that I hope you'll address in one upcoming show. As I understand it, the 7th amendment guarantees the right to a jury trial, which the court of Chancery is not. Why is that? Is it a matter of incorporation? And if so, could Elon Musk appeal and argue that the 7th amendment, like most other bill of right amendments, should be incorporated and the court of chancery is unconstitutional?
Everyone revels in my pain.
Is this episode about this guy?
https://resizing.flixster.com/aWtv-NK7QgijtoUwvgZqY8VaWQs=/300x300/v2/https://flxt.tmsimg.com/assets/p7227_i_h9_ab.jpg
Thank you for special podcast. Informative as usual!
Thank you for the fun, if short eposide! I have a question that I hope you'll address in one upcoming show. As I understand it, the 7th amendment guarantees the right to a jury trial, which the court of Chancery is not. Why is that? Is it a matter of incorporation? And if so, could Elon Musk appeal and argue that the 7th amendment, like most other bill of right amendments, should be incorporated and the court of chancery is unconstitutional?
I think the 7th amendment only applies to trials at common law, whereas the chancery is a court of equity