Time once again, boys and girls, to venture into the land where, mysteriously, what should be dry, almost unintelligible court decisions about inconsequential disputes become instead dry, unintelligible poetry — about those same disputes. Back in 1973, a sailor named Richard Mackensworth went to court seeking unpaid wages for a commercial voyage he had made in 1972. He sued the ship’s owner, American Trading Transportation Company, in a Pennsylvania federal court. The company’s lawyers tried to get the case dismissed on the ground that the company didn’t do business in Pennsylvania, arguing that Mackensworth would have to sue them in another state. Mackensworth’s lawyer, a fellow named Harr
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