During the
New Deal,
James M. Landis (James McCauley Landis,
1899-
1964) served as a member of the
Federal Trade Commission (
1933-
1934), as a member of the
Securities and Exchange Commission (
1935), and then as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (
1935-
1937). While dean of the
Harvard University Law School[?] (
1937-
1946), Landis also served as the regional director of the
United States Office of Civil Defense[?] (
1941-
1942) and then as the director of
American Economic Operations[?] and minister to the
Middle East. Friends with the Kennedy family for years, he served as Special Counsel to President
John F. Kennedy in
1961.
While Eliot Ness was chairman of the Diebold Corporation[?] in Canton, Ohio, Ness formed a venture with Dan T. Moore[?] and Landis. The Middle East Company[?] was an import-export firm, which leveraged Landis' capital and Moore's Mid East contacts.
In December of 1960, Landis turned in a report to president-elect Kennedy titled Report on Regulatory Agencies to the President-Elect[?]. The Landis report criticized the FPC for being inefficient and too pro-utility.
In 1925, Landis was a law clerk to Justice Louis Dembitz Brandeis of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Quotes:
- "A statute rarely stands alone. Back of Minerva was the brain of Jove, and behind Venus the spume of the ocean," in "A Note on 'Statutory Interpretation,' " 43 Harvard Law Review 886, 891 (1930).
- "If anybody ever flied to the moon, the very next day Trippe will ask the Civil Aeronautics Board to authorize regular service."
Works:
- 'The Business of the Supreme Court', by James M. Landis and Felx Frankfurter[?], (New York, 1928).
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