Tags: Case, Legal Case, Supreme Court Of The United States Case, Unit Of Work.
Taylor v. Taintor 83 U.S. 366 (1872) was a United States Supreme Court case. It is commonly credited as having decided that a person to whom a suspect is remanded such as a bail bondsman has sweeping rights to recover the suspect. However this is erroneous[citation needed] since the commonly cited portion of the case obiter dicta has no binding precedential value (although dicta can have persuasive value).