So, the case is interesting and illustrative for class. But, this is just the beginning. If you like to personalize cases - to help students understand that these cases involve real people making real decisions, the resources available to you are plentiful. Start with an article by Columbia Law Professor Victor Goldberg. Goldberg looks at the historical evidence to conclude that, ironically, the shrewd Wood had probably carefully crafted the Gordon contract so as to refrain from binding himself to performance - precisely the course of conduct that Cardozo concluded was unlikely. However, for me, his historical information on the principal players in the litigation is even more valuable than his insightful legal analysis.
Through his paper we learn that Otis Wood was one of somewhere between 14-17 children of colorful NY Mayor Fernando Wood. Father Fernando was famous for, among other things, having supported the Confederate cause during the Civil War. A loyal Tammany Hall Democrat, Fernando later served in Congress from NY. Other exploits of the colorful Wood family are documented online. Read here about Otis's involvement in the estate of his aunt Ida Mayfield Wood.
For her part, Lucy Lady Duff Gordon had already lived through at least one major disaster prior to the Wood business debacle. Lucy and her husband, Sir Cosmo Duff Gordon, survived the sinking of the Titanic, but not without controversy. Her story is dramatized in the video below. There is a wealth of images of Lady Duff Gordon available on the web - here at the Encyclopedia Titanica, and here. I was unable to find any images of Otis F. Wood. But here you will find an image of a drawing book most certainly produced by Wood's lithography company in NY.
In 2008, the Pace Law Review published results of a symposium on this interesting case. Other useful articles may be found here and here and here.
Image of Lucy, Lady Duff Gordon from: http://fashion.telegraph.co.uk/article/TMG8328862/Lady-Duff-Gordon-fashions-forgotten-grande-dame.html
Image from: http://dawndefined.blogspot.com/2009/04/milwaukee-museum.html

Imageof Lady Duff Gordon (third from left) and Sir Cosmo (standing directly behind her) from: http://articles.sfgate.com/2010-10-08/news/24117249_1_titanic-memorabilia-andrew-aldridge-sir-cosmo
Mark, the paper you attribute to Katherine Franke was written by her Columbia Law colleague Victor Goldberg. Here's a link to the SSRN version of that paper: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=870474
ReplyDeleteRip, thanks for the help. I have made the correction in the article.
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