{"has_more":true,"total_items":102,"items":[{"vg_id":0,"journal":"Separation of Powers Scholars' Brief in Seila Law v. CFPB, p. 3","title":"1 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England *261-62 (1st ed. 1765-69), *270 in Sharswood edition. However, context and general usage indicate that \"disposing\" means \"at his disposal\" for distributing them to his subjects. It seems Wurman mistook \"dispose\" for a modern \"disposal\" system of removal or dissolution. Blackstone often used \"dispose\" to mean \"use\" or \"distribute","authors":[{"author_name":"See Seila Law"}]},{"vg_id":0,"published_date":2020,"journal":"Colum. Law Rev","title":"Removal Permissions and the Forgotten Tenure of a Term of Years","authors":[{"author_name":"Jane Manners"},{"author_name":"& Lev Menand"}]},{"vg_id":0,"journal":"Article II Vests the Executive Power, not the Royal Prerogative","authors":[{"author_name":"Julian Davis Mortenson"}]},{"vg_id":0,"published_date":"2004-06-17","journal":"1789 in 11 Documentary History of the First Federal Congress","volume":868,"page_from":1789,"authors":[{"author_name":"Congressional Register"}],"page_to":1791}]}