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SOLUTION MANUAL The Legal Environment of Business, 14th Edition by Roger E. Meiners, Chapters 1 - 22, Complete $11.99   Add to cart

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SOLUTION MANUAL The Legal Environment of Business, 14th Edition by Roger E. Meiners, Chapters 1 - 22, Complete

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SOLUTION MANUAL The Legal Environment of Business, 14th Edition by Roger E. Meiners, Chapters 1 - 22, Complete SOLUTION MANUAL The Legal Environment of Business, 14th Edition by Roger E. Meiners, Chapters 1 - 22, Complete SOLUTION MANUAL The Legal Environment of Business, 14th Edition by Ro...

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SOLUTION MANUAL xx




The Legal Environment of Business, 14th Edition
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by Roger E. Meiners, Chapters 1 - 22, Complete
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,TABLE OF CONTENTS
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 Chapter 1. Today’s Business Environment: Law and Ethics
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 Chapter 2. The Court Systems
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 Chapter 3. Trials and Resolving Disputes
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 Chapter 4. The Constitution: Focus on Application to Business
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 Chapter 5. Criminal Law and Business
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 Chapter 6. Elements of Torts
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 Chapter 7. Business Torts and Product Liability
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 Chapter 8. Real and Personal Property
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 Chapter 9. Intellectual Property
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 Chapter 10. Contracts
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 Chapter 11. Domestic and International Sales
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 Chapter 12. Business Organizations
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 Chapter 13. Negotiable Instruments, Credit, and Bankruptcy
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 Chapter 14. Agency and the Employment Relationship
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 Chapter 15. Employment and Labor Regulations
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 Chapter 16. Employment Discrimination
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 Chapter 17. The Regulatory Process
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 Chapter 18. Securities Regulation
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 Chapter 19. Consumer Protection
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 Chapter 20. Antitrust Law
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 Chapter 21. Environmental Law
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 Chapter 22. The International Legal Environment of Business
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,CHAPTER 1 xx




Table of Contents xx xx




Answer to Discussion Question ................................................................................................................... 1
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Answers to Case Questions.......................................................................................................................... 1
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Answers to Ethics and Social Questions...................................................................................................... 3
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Answer to Discussion Question xx xx xx




Should the common law maxim “Ignorance of the law is no excuse” apply to an immigrant who speakslittle
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English and was not educated in the United States? How about for a tourist who does not speak English?
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Everyone knows criminal acts are prohibited, but what about subtler rules that differ across countries and so
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may be misunderstood by foreigners?
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Answer: It is generally true that ignorance of the law is no excuse. Citizens are deemed to have constructive
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knowledge of the law. Yet, as well known as this rule is, it is surprising how often it is proffered as an
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excuse. (A Westlaw search cases finds hundreds of examples). Examples include: Deluco v. Dezi (Conn.
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Super) (lack of knowledge regarding the state‘s usury laws is no excuse for the inclusion of an illegal
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interest rate in a sales contract); and Plumlee v. Paddock (ignorance of thefact that the subject matter
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of the contract was illegal was not excuse). The courts have provided a small exception to the rule
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when it comes to people in lack of English language skills. Consider Flanery v. Kuska, (defendant did not
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speak English was advised by a friend that an answer to a complaint was not required); Ramon v. Dept.
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of Transportation, (no English and an inability to understand the law required for an excuse); Yurechko
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v. County of Allegheny, (Ignorance and with the fact that the municipality suffered no hardship in late
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lawsuit filing was an excuse).
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Answers to Case Questions xx xx xx




1. Facts from an English judge’s decision in 1884: “The crew of an English yacht..................were cast away in
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a storm on the high seas . . . and were compelled to put into an open boat. ............ They had no supply
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of water and no supply of food. . . . That on the eighteenth day . . . they ........... suggested that one
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should be sacrificed to save the rest. . . . That next day . . . they . . . went to the boy............. put a knife
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into his throat and killed him . . . the three men fed upon the body ...........of the boy for four days; [then]
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the boat was picked up by a passing vessel, and [they] were rescued. . . . and committed for trial. . . .
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if the men had not fed upon the body of the boy they would probably not have survived to be
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sopicked up and rescued, but would...... have died of famine. The boy, being in a much weaker
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condition, was likely to have died before them ........... The real question in this case [is] whether killing
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under the conditions set forth ......... be or be not murder.” Do you consider the acts to be immoral?
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[Regina v. Dudley and Stephens, 14 Queens Bench Division 273 (1884)]
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Answer: This points out that the legal system has limits. Its acceptability is dictated by legal culture--
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whichdetermines whether law will be enforced, obeyed, avoided, or abused. It is limited by the informal
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rules of the society--its customs and values. One limit is the extent to which society will allow the formal
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rules to be imposed when a crime is committed in odd circumstances. Here there was an intentional
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murder. Does the motive for the murder, the effort to save several lives by sacrificing one
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, life, make it a crime that should be punished? Not all crimes are treated the same. It also raisesquestions
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about the desirability of not giving judges flexibility in sentencing.
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There was a precedent for a light sentence in this case in U.S. law: U.S. v. Holmes, 20 F. Cas. 360 (No.
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15383) (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1842). The case involved a sinking ocean liner. Several passengers madeit to the only
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lifeboat, which was far too overcrowded. The captain decided to save the women and children and
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threw several men overboard. The lifeboat was rescued. The grand jury refused to indict the captain
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from murder, only for manslaughter. He got a six month sentence.
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The British judge in the case here imposed the death penalty upon the person who survived.
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The judge found it difficult to rule that every man on board had the right to make law by his own
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hand.The Crown reduced the sentence to six months.
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2. Smoking is a serious health hazard. Cigarettes are legal. Should cigarette manufacturers be liable for the
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serious illnesses and untimely deaths caused by their unavoidably dangerous products, eventhough they
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post a warning on the package and consumers voluntarily assume the health risks by smoking?
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[Cipollone v. Liggett Group, Inc., 505 U.S. 504 (1992)]
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Answer: The general rule that exists now is that since the government has ordered the posting of
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warninglabels on cigarettes, and since the dangers of smoking are well known, consumers have been
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warned and are not due compensation if they kill themselves by smoking. The Cippoline case, since
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reviewed by the Supreme Court, appears to be of limited impact since the victim was adjudged to have
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become addicted to cigarettes before the warning label was ordered in 1964. If cigarette makers were
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held responsible for all health problems associated with cigarettes, then, like alcohol and other
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dangerous products, the damages would likely be so high it would effectively ban the products.
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Presumably, in a free society if adults are clearly informed of the risks of products that cannot be made
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safe, they accept the risk. Tobacco and alcohol producers cannot take the dangers out of the products
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except at the margin by encouraging responsible drinking and the like. Are drugs like cocaine different?
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3. Two eight-year-old boys were seriously injured when riding Honda mini-trail bikes. The boys were riding
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on public streets, ran a stop sign, and were hit by a truck. The bikes had clear warning labels on the
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front stating they were only for off-road use. The manual stated the bikes were not to be usedon public
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streets. The parents sued Honda. The supreme court of Washington said one basic issue existed: “Is a
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manufacturer liable when children are injured while riding one of its mini-trail bikes on apublic road in
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violation of manufacturer and parental warnings?” Is it unethical to make products like mini-trail bikes
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children will use when we know accidents like this will happen? [Baughn v. Honda Motor Co., 727 P.2d
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655 Sup. Ct, Wash., (1986)]
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Answer: The court found no liability for the manufacturers. There was no defect; the product was safe for
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intended use. Safety instructions were clear; the parents let the boys ride the bikes. Anything can
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bedangerous--baseballs are dangerous when they hit the head, swings are dangerous when kids
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jumpout of them; there is only so much that can be done to make the government the ―national
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nanny‖ asthe Washington Post once said about excessive consumer protection. Parents must accept a
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high degree of responsible for their own children.
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4. Johnson Controls adopted a “fetal protection policy” that women of childbearing age could not work in
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the battery-making division of the company. Exposure to lead in the battery operation could causeharm
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to unborn babies. The company was concerned about possible legal liability for injury sufferedby babies
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of mothers who had worked in the battery division. The Supreme Court held the companypolicy was
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illegal. It was an “excuse for denying women equal employment opportunities.” Is the Court forcing the
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company to be unethical by allowing pregnant women who ignore the warnings to expose their babies
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to the lead? [United Auto Workers v. Johnson Controls, 499 U.S. 187 (1991)]
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Answer: The Court held it a form of sex discrimination to prevent women of child-bearing age from holding
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the more dangerous jobs. The company argued that it did this to protect itself from possibleliability in
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case of damage to babies and that the decision was ethical. The replacements for these workers were
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often men or more senior women, who tended to be higher income workers, so this
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