Krupa v. Farmington River Power Co., 364 U.S. 506 (1960). · Go Syfert
Krupa v. Farmington River Power Co., 364 U.S. 506 (1960). Cases Citing This Book View Copy Cite
“the right to a jury trial is fundamental,' and waiver is not lightly to be inferred.”
55 citation events (3 in the last 25 years) across 7 distinct courts.
Strongest positive: Peabody Internat'l v. Coordination Tech., No. Cv890103418s (May 18, 1992) (connsuperct, 1992-05-18)
Treatment trajectory · 1962 → 2026 · click a year to view as-of
1962 1994 2026
Top citers, strongest first. 1 distinct citer. How cited ↗
discussed Cited as authority (quoted) Peabody Internat'l v. Coordination Tech., No. Cv890103418s (May 18, 1992)
Conn. Super. Ct. · 1992 · quote attribution · 1 verbatim quote · confidence low
the right to a jury trial is fundamental,' and waiver is not lightly to be inferred.
Retrieving the full opinion text from the archive…
KRUPA Et Al.
v.
FARMINGTON RIVER POWER CO.
403, Misc.
Supreme Court of the United States.
Dec 12, 1960.
364 U.S. 506
Thaddeus Malissewski for appellants.
Per Curiam.
Cited by 12 opinions  |  Published
1 passage pin-cited by 1 case
Pinpoint authority: bottom 62%
Citer courts: Connecticut Superior Court (1)
Per Curiam.

The motion to dismiss is granted and the appeal is dismissed. Treating the papers whereon the appeal was taken as a petition for writ of certiorari, certiorari is denied.