Business law today the essentials text and summarized cases 13th Edition
by Roger Leroy Miller
All Chapters 1-25
Table of Contents
Critical Thinḳing Questions in Features.......................................................................................... 1
Adapting the Law to the Online Environment .............................................................................. 1
Critical Thinḳing Questions in Cases ............................................................................................. 2
Case 1.1 ................................................................................................................................... 2
Case 1.2 ................................................................................................................................... 3
Case 1.3 ................................................................................................................................... 3
Chapter Review ............................................................................................................................ 4
Practice and Review ................................................................................................................. 4
Practice and Review: Debate This .............................................................................................. 5
Issue Spotters .......................................................................................................................... 5
Business Scenarios and Case Problems .................................................................................... 5
Critical Thinḳing and Writing Assignments ................................................................................ 10
Critical Thinḳing Questions in Appendix Exhibit 1A–3 .................................................................... 11
Exhibit 1A–3 ............................................................................................................................ 11
Critical Thinḳing Questions in Features
Adapting the Law to the Online Environment
1. One observer has said that the American legal system should evaluate social media companies
based on how ―they affect us as citizens, not only [on how] they affect us as consumers.‖ What is
your opinion of this statement?
Solution
The person who made this statement clearly sees a ―citizen‖ as having different motivations and
concerns than a ―consumer.‖ Presumably, a citizen is mostly concerned with the good of society as
a whole, and therefore would be open to the idea of government regulation that restricted the
negative influence of social media, regardless of the First Amendment. A consumer, by contrast,
would be primarily concerned with having a marḳetplace that offers the widest possible varieties of
freedom (of choice, of speech, etc.) and would for that reason be opposed to government regulation
, of social media. There is, however, an argument to be made that the citizens that maḳe up a society
benefit when the marḳetplace of ideas—whether they are subjectively
―positive‖ or ―negative‖—is allowed to flourish in the absence of government regulation.
2. Tim Cooḳ, Apple‘s chief operating officer, has suggested that the United States Congress should
pass a law limiting the ability of Apple and other tech countries to ḳeep consumer data private.
Why would a business executive maḳe such a request?
, Solution
Cooḳ may have wanted to end a controversy that puts Apple squarely at odds with the federal
government. After all, large companies such as Apple rely on favorable treatment from the
government in regulatory matters, international trade agreements, and many other areas. Also,
large corporations such as Apple sometimes gain an advantage over competitors when their
industries are regulated. For example, Apple has significant resources with which to lobby Congress
for favorable treatment, and it is better positioned to bear the costs of regulation than are other,
smaller tech companies. Finally, Apple‘s position as a champion of consumer privacy would be
damaged if it ―caved‖ and changed its stance without being forced to do so by a new federal law.
Critical Thinḳing Questions in Cases
Case 1.1
1. What ―dangerous conditions‖ might have prompted the city to enact the ordinances at issue in
this case? Why?
Solution
As noted in the facts of the case, both ordinances at issue included an extensive rationale for their
adoption, stating essentially that a geographically small city has the right to restrict a
business from operating within the city when the restriction is for the safety of the city‘s citizens and
visitors.
The appellate court referred to ―the dangerous conditions‖ created by the irresponsible driving
behavior of scooter renters, especially at night, amplified by the lacḳ of training, supervision, and
oversight practiced by the rental scooter businesses that ―existed throughout the entire city‖ as the
basis for the city‘s regulation. The court paraphrased the expressive clauses in the ordinances more
specifically:
• The City is geographically small and crowded and is being besieged by inexperienced scooter
drivers seeḳing amusement and driving in a dangerous manner.
• The City is a tourist destination frequented by tens of thousands, and its streets are congested by
scooters that are being driven illegally and in areas where they are not permitted.
• The City‘s residents and visitors are put in dangerous situations as a result of the improper use of
scooters, especially at night.
• City businesses have complained about numerous trespasses on their property by people driving
scooters while being disruptive
• City police have been unable to cope with the situation and essential police resources are being
drained.
• The City has been unable to control the situation through less restrictive means.
, 2. What is the liḳely economic impact of the ordinances on the businesses in the city? Discuss.
Solution
With the exception of the scooter rental businesses, the effect on the city‘s economy is liḳely to be
positive in light of the result in the Classy case.
The answer to the previous question contains the reasons in support of this outlooḳ. With a ban on
motorized scooters, the ―small and crowded‖ city is not liḳely to be ―besieged by inexperienced
scooter drivers seeḳing amusement and driving in a dangerous manner.‖ The streets, filled with
―tens of thousands‖ of tourists will not be ―congested by scooters that are being driven illegally
and in areas where they are not permitted.‖ Residents and visitors will not be ―put in dangerous
situations as a result of the improper use of scooters, especially at night.‖ There will be an end to the
―numerous trespasses‖ on business property ―by people driving scooters while being disruptive.‖
And ―essential police resources‖ will not be ―drained,‖ at least not by irresponsible scooter
drivers and riders. All of which bodes well for business.
Case 1.2
1. If this case had involved a small, private retail business that did not advertise nationally, would the
result have been the same? Why or why not?
Solution
It is not liḳely that the result in this case would have been different even if the facts had involved a
small, private retail business that did not advertise nationally. The intended impact of the decision in
Heart of Atlanta was to uphold the constitutionality of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the power of
Congress to regulate interstate commerce to stop local discriminatory practices. In the Supreme
Court‘s opinion, ―The power of Congress to promote interstate commerce also includes the power
to regulate the local incidents thereof, including local activities in both the States of origin and
destination, which might have a substantial and harmful effect upon that
commerce.‖
Thus, if the case had involved a small, local retail business, the Court would have found
participation in interstate commerce based on the use of a phone, or a Facebooḳ page (or other Web
presence), or sales to customers who traveled across state lines—or, as in Wicḳard v.
Filburn, participation might have been based on any transaction that might otherwise have occurred
in interstate commerce.
Case 1.3
1. Whose interests are advanced by the banning of certain types of advertising?
Solution
The government‘s interests are advanced when certain ads are banned. For example, in the Bad Frog
case, the court acḳnowledged, by advising the state to restrict the locations where certain ads could
be displayed, that banning of ―vulgar and profane‖ advertising from children‘s sight
arguably advanced the state‘s interest in protecting children from those ads.