Martin V. Bergen (c. 1872 – 1941), American football player, coach, lawyer
The U.S. Supreme Court in Lawrence had stated that it was adopting the reasoning of Justice John Paul Stevens in his dissent to Bowers v. Hardwick, which Lawrence overruled.
Dean Martin | Martin Luther | Martin Scorsese | Ricky Martin | Martin Luther King, Jr. | Lockheed Martin | Martin | Steve Martin | Martin Sheen | St. Martin's Press | Martin Heidegger | Martin Luther King | Max Martin | Aston Martin | Paul Martin | Martin Lawrence | Martin Van Buren | Martin Luther King Jr. | Glenn L. Martin Company | Martin Short | St Martin-in-the-Fields | Martin O'Neill | Martin Amis | George R. R. Martin | George Martin | Martin McGuinness | Martin Freeman | Martin Buber | José de San Martín | Martin of Tours |
In 1417, the Council of Constance resolved the Schism, proclaiming Martin V the new Pope and demanding that Benedict XIII renounce his claim.
In Martin v. Hunter's Lessee (1816), the Supreme Court confronted the Chief Justice of Virginia, Spencer Roane, who had previously declared a Supreme Court decision unconstitutional and refused to permit the state courts to abide by it.
The Council of Constance (1414–1418) successfully ended the Schism by deposing two Popes (John XXIII and Benedict XIII) – the third Pope abdicated – and electing a successor in Martin V.
Under Urban V (1363) the list contained seven cases; under Gregory XI (1372) nine; under Martin V (1420) ten; under Julius II (1511) twelve: under Paul III (1536) seventeen; under Gregory XIII in 1577 twenty, and under the same pontiff in 1583 twenty-one; under Paul V (1606 and 1619) twenty; and the same number in the final shape given to it by Urban VIII.
A portion of this estate, however, was later the subject of the landmark Supreme Court case Martin v. Hunter's Lessee (1816).
In July 1971, United States Attorney General John N. Mitchell announced that the Shoup Voting Machine Corp. of Philadelphia, its subsidiary Southern Municipal Sales, Inc., Shoup president Irving H. Myers, company executive vice president Martin V. Schott, several other Shoup employees, and other individuals had been indicted by a Philadelphia grand jury for a total of four indictments for bribery, mail fraud, and conspiracy.