E & M 660.205 Section One - Johns Hopkins University

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THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY
Baltimore, Maryland
Business Law I
E & M 660.205
Mondays, 6:15 to 9:00 p.m.
Spring 2009
Section One
Latrobe Hall, Room 107
INSTRUCTOR:
PHONE:
EMAIL:
OFFICE HOURS:
David A. Fisher
(443) 846-6128 (text messages preferred)
dafisher@jhu.edu
Mon. & Tues., 5:00-5:30 (104 Whitehead Hall) and by appointment
COURSE ASST.:
PHONE:
EMAIL:
OFFICE HOURS:
Beth Keene
(717) 572-4482
ekeene2@jhu.edu
To be announced (104 Whitehead Hall) and by appointment
TEXT/MATERIAL:
Miller, Roger LeRoy, and Gaylord A. Jentz. Business Law Today: The
Essentials. 8th ed. West, 2008 (and other materials to be assigned or distributed
during the semester)
OVERVIEW:
In this course, we will examine the legal environment in which business operates,
specifically reviewing the sources of law in the United States, how those laws are
organized, implemented, developed, and interpreted. We will also examine how
disputes are resolved and/or adjudicated through the legal system. We will
examine the specific areas of criminal, tort, and contract law in the context of
how they apply to American business.
EVALUATION:
Students will be evaluated based on performance on in-class and out-of-class
exercises, a mid-term exam and a final (non-cumulative) exam, as follows:
Mid-term exam
Final exam
Assigned exercises
Attendance
35%
35%
25%
5%
GRADING:
93-100
90-92.9
87-89.9
84-86.9
80-83.9
77-79.9
73-76.9
70-72.9
67-69.9
63-66.9
60-62.9
0-59.9
CLASS FORMAT:
This course utilizes lectures, in-class exercises and in-class discussion on the
various topics covered. Students are required to read the assigned materials
ahead of the class period in which the materials will be discussed. Students are
expected to participate in-class discussions and in-class exercises.
A
AB+
B
BC+
C
CD+
D
DF
ATTENDANCE:
Students are expected to attend all class sessions except in cases of emergency
(e.g., illness, death in family), religious holidays (the observance of which
requires restriction of daily activity), or participation in official University
functions (e.g., field trips or athletic events). In the case of absence for special
personal reasons other than those mentioned above, it is the responsibility of the
student to confer with the instructor as to whether the absence is to be excused.
When determining whether or not to excuse the absence, the instructor may
require documentary evidence. Unexcused absences will have a negative impact
on your grade.
OTHER POINTS:

Attendance and participation are essential. PLEASE BE PUNCTUAL AND FUNCTIONAL.

Instructions as to assignments and exams, as well as any modifications to the class schedule or
reading assignments, will be announced during class meetings and/or emailed to the class. It is
each student’s responsibility to provide an up-to-date email address and/or otherwise obtain
any such information if class is missed.

Work submitted late will be downgraded. Only in the event of a genuine emergency, fully and
satisfactorily documented by the student, will any exception be considered.

Spelling, grammar, punctuation and careless errors will affect the grades of written materials.
Please proofread all work to avoid losing points unnecessarily.

All written assignments must contain acknowledgment of reliance on outside sources for each
point relied upon. The source of each quotation, statement, idea, assertion, theory or the like that
is not the original product of the student must be documented in a footnote or endnote.

Each student is expected to do his or her own work except for specified in-class exercises.
Instances of suspected academic dishonesty will be reported to appropriate University officials.
(Please see Special Note on Student Ethics below.)

There is no senior option.

If, for any reason, you believe you require a special accommodation of any type, you must first
go through proper University channels to document and support any request for such an
accommodation. If you are not sure how to do this, please contact the office of the dean of
students. No requests for special accommodations will be considered without such prior
documentation and support.
 There will be no opportunity to do extra work once the session is completed to make up for poor
performance on assigned work during the session.
SPECIAL NOTE ON STUDENT ETHICS:
The strength of the university depends on academic and personal integrity. In this course, you must be
honest and truthful. Ethical violations include cheating on exams, plagiarism, reuse of assignments,
improper use of Internet and electronic devices, unauthorized collaboration, alteration of graded
assignments, forgery and falsification, lying, facilitating academic dishonesty, and unfair competition.
In addition, the specific ethics guidelines for this course are:
(1)
(2)
(3)
Students are not to share information regarding completed assignments, exercises,
quizzes, exams, etc. with students who have not yet completed those items.
Students are not to present false reasons for non-attendance of any scheduled class.
Students are not to act disrespectful in verbal or non-verbal responses to other students
regarding anything said or done by those students during class periods.
Report any violations you witness to the instructor. You may consult the associate dean of student
affairs and/or the chairman of the Ethics Board beforehand. See the guide on “Academic Ethics for
Undergraduates” and the Ethics Board website (http://ethics.jhu.edu) for more information.
SCHEDULE:
Date
Topic
Reading
01/26
Introduction and course overview
02/02
Sources of Law/Types of Law
Chapter 1
02/09
U.S. Legal System/Finding the Law
Ch. 1 (appendix), Chapter 3
02/16
Civil Procedure/Anatomy of a Case
Chapter 3
02/23
Legal Research
03/02
Criminal Law
03/09
MID-TERM EXAM
03/16
NO CLASS – SPRING BREAK
03/23
Tort Law
Chapter 4 (pp. 111-22)
03/30
Tort Law
Chapter 4 (pp. 122-31)
04/06
Contract Law: The Basics
Chapter 7
04/13
Contract Law: Beyond the Basics
Chapter 8
04/20
Contract Law: Business Contracts
Chapter 9
04/27
Contract Law: Sales/UCC
Chapter 11
05/11
FINAL EXAM (6:00 to 9:00 p.m.) in 107 Latrobe Hall
Chapter 6 (pp. 171-82, 185-93)
SPECIAL NOTES ABOUT THE SCHEDULE:
--This schedule is subject to change based on the amount of material covered each week,
cancellation of class due to unforeseen circumstances, or other unexpected occurrences.
--NOTE ON 02/23 CLASS: Meet at Eisenhower Library, electronic classroom, main
level (just past guard’s desk). Bring picture ID. Please be on time.
REMINDER
Class participation is an important aspect of this course and affects the course grade
Quality of participation is more important than strict quantity of participation However, students
who make little or no attempt to participate on a regular and meaningful basis will be downgraded.
Please keep in mind that legal issues are often subject to differing opinions, analyses, and
conclusions. The most learned judges often disagree with each other. Therefore, students should
not hesitate to voice their opinions and conclusions and to put forth their reasoning in support of
such opinions and conclusions. Vigorous debate is not only expected and encouraged, but serves as
a valuable learning tool. It is expected that such vigorous debate will remain courteous and that all
students will be respectful and tolerant of divergent views and analyses.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT:
"I respect faith, but doubt is what gets you an education." Wilson Mizner
"Education is a progressive discovery of our own ignorance." Will Durant
“There is nothing permanent except change.” Heraclitus
"Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored." Aldous Huxley
“If you think education is expensive, try ignorance.” Derek Bok
“Many highly intelligent people are poor thinkers. Many people of average intelligence are skilled thinkers.
The power of a car is separate from the way the car is driven.” Edward de Bono
“It is possible to store the mind with a million facts and still be entirely uneducated.” Alec Bourne
“Universities should be safe havens where ruthless examination of realities will not be distorted by the aim to
please or inhibited by the risk of displeasure.” Kingman Brewster
“The classroom should be an entrance into the world, not an escape from it.” John Ciardi
“All generalizations are dangerous.” Alexandre Dumas
"Knowledge is a process of piling up facts; wisdom lies in their simplification." Martin H. Fischer
“How did the scarecrow know he didn't have a brain?” Lance W. Bledsoe
"Outside of a dog, a book is probably man's best friend, and inside of a dog, it's too dark to read." Groucho
Marx.
“I'm not final because I'm right, I'm right because I'm final.” Judge Mills Lane
“That oral contract isn’t worth the paper it’s written on.” Samuel Goldwyn
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