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Appellate
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November 19, 2024
Keep Colo. Interest Rate Opt-Out Law Blocked, 10th Circ. Told
A coalition of organizations representing the financial services industry has urged the Tenth Circuit to uphold a district court's injunction against a Colorado interest rate opt-out law, arguing the state's attempt to reframe the federal provision allowing the opt-out as a consumer protection measure ignores the underlying statute's history as rooted in federalist principles.
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November 19, 2024
11th Circ. Urged To Revive Fla. Cancer Cluster Suit
Several Florida individuals diagnosed with cancer after exposure to soil that defense contractor Pratt & Whitney allegedly contaminated with radiation told the Eleventh Circuit Tuesday their claims shouldn't be barred by statute of limitations, saying a jury should determine what caused their illnesses.
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November 19, 2024
11th Circ. Weighs Whether Tornado Cash Sanctions Overreach
An Eleventh Circuit panel on Tuesday dove deep into the mechanisms of cryptocurrency mixing service Tornado Cash as the judges weighed whether government sanctions intended to curb illicit finance on the protocol are permitted under the law.
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November 19, 2024
10th Circ. Judge Asks If PLO Activity Enough For US Suit
A Tenth Circuit judge hearing arguments Tuesday about whether federal courts have jurisdiction over the Palestinian Authority and the Palestine Liberation Organization asked an attorney representing the entities whether the group "conducting activity" in the U.S. was enough for courts here to consider the case.
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November 19, 2024
10th Circ. Mulls Constitutional Challenge To Securities Orgs
A three-judge panel of the Tenth Circuit on Tuesday heard arguments in a case challenging the constitutionality of the nation's largest securities clearing organizations, with the judges weighing whether they should stop the organizations from acting against a broker-dealer while the case is ongoing.
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November 19, 2024
What's On Deck At 10th Circ. Arguments In CPSC Magnet Case
On Wednesday, the Tenth Circuit will hear arguments over whether a rule from the Consumer Product Safety Commission over safety standards for high-powered magnets is overly broad and unconstitutional. Here, Law360 looks at what the parties are expected to argue.
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November 19, 2024
9th Circ. Grapples With $56M Verdict In TM Beer Battle
A Ninth Circuit panel on Tuesday weighed whether to uphold a $56 million trial victory for Stone Brewing over allegations that MillerCoors infringed the "Stone" mark with its Keystone beer, with judges digging into questions about whether Stone Brewing filed the suit late.
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November 19, 2024
Wash. Justices Critical Of Splintering College Sex Abuse Case
Washington State Supreme Court justices on Tuesday seemed to doubt the state's position that an adult survivor of sexual abuse needed to bring separate claims for harms suffered before and after she turned 18, even though all allegedly stemmed from the same grooming by her college basketball coach.
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November 19, 2024
Loper Bright Can't Save DTE Safety Appeal, Mich. Court Says
A Michigan appellate court was not persuaded by an energy company's invocation of the demise of the Chevron agency-deference doctrine, affirming on Monday a safety citation issued to the company after an employee's death and ruling that the state never followed Chevron deference anyway.
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November 19, 2024
Alaska Airlines Fights Emergency 9th Circ. Bid To Halt Merger
Alaska Airlines has urged the Ninth Circuit not to grant an emergency motion blocking its $1.9 billion acquisition of Hawaiian Airlines, saying the request was filed by flyers and travel agents "without an emergency" after they waited for four months to try to enjoin the airlines from merging.
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November 19, 2024
Ga. Atty Gives Up Law License After Felony Charges
Georgia's justices accepted attorney Austin Jones' voluntary surrender of his law license on Tuesday, after he previously pled guilty in federal court to two felony charges of possession of child pornography.
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November 19, 2024
Pennsylvania Justices Doubt Gaming Board's Morality Calls
An attorney for Pennsylvania's Gaming Control Board struggled to convince the state Supreme Court on Tuesday that an application for a license to operate video game terminals should be denied because the applicants were involved in the skill games business, which the board views as unsavory.
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November 19, 2024
Widow Can't Get Malpractice Suit Over Husband's Fall Revived
A North Carolina appeals court on Tuesday declined to reinstate a suit by a widow alleging that nurses at Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital were responsible for a fall taken by her husband while he was recovering from brain surgery, saying the trial court rightly excluded her expert's testimony.
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November 19, 2024
Misnomer Doesn't Doom Fire Subrogation Suit, NC Panel Told
An insurer that sued two fire safety companies asked a North Carolina appeals court for another chance after it misidentified itself in its complaint, saying it made a nonprejudicial mistake in its suit seeking recovery for a 2019 blaze at a Hardee's restaurant it insured.
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November 19, 2024
10th Circ. Iffy On Colo.'s Remedy To Generic EpiPen Takings
A Tenth Circuit panel on Tuesday pressed Colorado regulators on whether requiring epinephrine auto-injector makers to repeatedly sue over the cost of complying with a state program provides an adequate legal remedy, with one judge saying that that route offers no finality for manufacturers.
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November 19, 2024
NJ Man Can't Revive Autozone Slip And Fall Injury Suit
A New Jersey appeals panel on Tuesday refused to reinstate a man's slip and fall case against Autozone Inc., saying he presented no evidence that the shop was or should have been aware that the floor was wet before he fell.
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November 19, 2024
Undefined Terms Cinch Cloudera's Win In 'Cloudy' Fraud Suit
The Ninth Circuit on Tuesday upheld the dismissal of a proposed class action against Cloudera Inc. alleging the data management and analytics company duped investors into buying stock at artificially inflated prices, saying the suit didn't substantiate its falsity claims with clear definitions for terms like "cloud native."
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November 19, 2024
SF Urges Calif. Panel To Rethink Waymo City Approval
The city and county of San Francisco urged a California appellate court Tuesday to find the California Public Utilities Commission abused its discretion in allowing Waymo to operate self-driving vehicles on city streets without imposing requirements, arguing "there are no guardrails" even though the cars pose serious safety hazards.
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November 19, 2024
Fed. Circ. Backs Denial Of Video IP Injunction Against X
The Federal Circuit on Tuesday upheld a Texas federal judge's decision denying VidStream's bid to block X Corp. from deploying features that allegedly infringe its patent on a system for receiving and distributing user-generated video.
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November 19, 2024
Pa. Candidates Launch Litigation Blitz To Settle Tight Race
With Republican U.S. Senate candidate Dave McCormick ahead of incumbent Democrat Bob Casey by fewer than 18,000 votes in Pennsylvania's unofficial count Tuesday, the candidates and their political parties have turned to filing lawsuits against individual counties over their decisions to include or exclude relatively small numbers of provisional ballots in their totals.
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November 19, 2024
Ga. Panel Says 190-Year-Old Marshland Grant Is Valid
A Georgia appellate court has sided with a company seeking to retain ownership of 1,000 acres of Georgia coastal marshland by using an 1834 document in which the state granted the land to the company's predecessor-in-title.
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November 19, 2024
Calif. Man Wants 9th Circ. To Rehear LG Battery Decision
A California man who alleges that a faulty LG Chem Ltd. 18650 lithium-ion battery melted the skin off his hand is asking the Ninth Circuit for an en banc rehearing of a decision dismissing his defect claims against the company, saying the panel broke with other circuits and binding precedent by finding that California courts did not have jurisdiction over the Seoul-based company.
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November 19, 2024
No Coverage Owed For 1977 Auto Crash, Mich. Panel Rules
A man who was injured in a 1977 automobile accident cannot get no-fault injury benefits from an auto insurer decades later, a Michigan appeals court ruled, finding there's no evidence the insurer either issued benefits payments for the man or that a claim was ever filed for him.
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November 19, 2024
Utah Counties, Feds Ask Justices To Restore Rail Oil Project
Utah counties and the federal government fired back at a Colorado county's attempt to affirm a D.C. Circuit ruling that overturned federal approval of a rail project intended to haul crude oil out of Utah's Uinta Basin, telling the U.S. Supreme Court in separate briefs the county's understanding of the National Environmental Policy Act is incorrect.
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November 19, 2024
Recount Underway In Tight NC Supreme Court Race
The votes for a North Carolina Supreme Court seat that Democratic incumbent Justice Allison Riggs has clinched by a narrow margin will be recounted starting Wednesday, at the behest of her Republican opponent, according to the state Board of Elections.
Expert Analysis
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Recent Securities Cases Highlight Risks In AI Disclosures
Increasing public disclosure about the use and risks of artificial intelligence, and related litigation asserting that such disclosures are false or misleading, suggest that issuers need to exercise great care with respect to how they describe the benefits of AI, say Richard Zelichov and Danny Tobey at DLA Piper.
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Sublimit And Policy Interpretation Lessons From Amtrak Case
The recently settled dispute between Amtrak and its insurers over sublimit coverage illustrates that parties with unclear manuscript policies may wish to avoid litigation in favor of settlement — as the New York federal court declined to decide the case by applying prior term interpretations, says Laura Maletta at Chartwell Law.
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3rd Circ. Hertz Ruling Highlights Flawed Bankruptcy Theory
The Third Circuit, in its recent Hertz bankruptcy decision, became the latest appeals court to hold that noteholders were entitled to interest before shareholders under the absolute priority rule, but risked going astray by invoking the flawed theory of code impairment, say Matthew McGill and David Casazza at Gibson Dunn.
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Opinion
Barrett Is Right: Immunity Is Wrong Framework In Trump Case
Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s concurrence in Trump v. U.S., where the majority opinion immunized former presidents almost entirely from criminal prosecution for official actions, rests on a firmer constitutional foundation than the majority’s immunity framework, says Matthew Brogdon at Utah Valley University.
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Opinion
This Election, We Need To Talk About Court Process
In recent decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has markedly transformed judicial processes — from summary judgment standards to notice pleadings — which has, in turn, affected individuals’ substantive rights, and we need to consider how the upcoming presidential election may continue this pattern, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.
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A Look At The PTAB's Assessment Of Prior Art Exceptions
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board's approach over the last 10 years to assessing Section 102(b) prior art exceptions reveals a few trends, including that evidence of common ownership may have a higher likelihood of successfully disqualifying prior art under Section 102(b)(2)(C) at the institution stage, say Louis Panzica and David Holman at Sterne Kessler.
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Series
Playing Diplomacy Makes Us Better Lawyers
Similar to the practice of law, the rules of Diplomacy — a strategic board game set in pre-World War I Europe — are neither concise nor without ambiguity, and weekly gameplay with our colleagues has revealed the game's practical applications to our work as attorneys, say Jason Osborn and Ben Bevilacqua at Winston & Strawn.
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5th Circ. Shows Admin Rules Can Survive Court Post-Chevron
The Fifth Circuit's textual analysis of the Fair Labor Standards Act, contributing to its recent affirming of the U.S. Department of Labor’s authority to set an overtime exemption salary threshold, suggests administrative laws can survive post-Chevron challenges, say Jessi Thaller-Moran and Erin Barker at Brooks Pierce.
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Open Questions In Unsettled Geofence Warrant Landscape
The Fourth and Fifth Circuits recently reached radically divergent conclusions about the constitutionality of geofence warrants, creating an uncertain landscape in which defendants should assert and preserve the full range of conventional Fourth Amendment challenges, says Charles Fowler at McKool Smith.
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Applying High Court's Domestic Corruption Rulings To FCPA
After the U.S. Supreme Court narrowed the domestic corruption statutes in three decisions over the past year and a half, it’s worth evaluating whether these rulings may have an impact on Foreign Corrupt Practices Act enforcement, and if attorneys can use the court’s reasoning in international bribery cases, says James Koukios at MoFo.
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Bid Protest Spotlight: Debriefings, Timeliness, Documentation
James Tucker at MoFo examines three recent decisions from the Federal Circuit, the U.S. Government Accountability Office and the U.S. Court of Federal Claims concerning an agency's decision not to hold post-award discussions, a timeliness trap in certain Federal Supply Schedule procurements and the importance of providing contemporaneous documentation in price-evaluation protests.
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Conn. Court Split May Lead To Vertical Forum Shopping
As shown by a recent ruling in State v. Exxon Mobil, Connecticut state and federal courts are split on personal jurisdiction, and until the Connecticut Supreme Court steps in, parties may be incentivized to forum shop, causing foreign entities to endure costly litigation and uncertain liability, says Matthew Gibbons at Shipman & Goodwin.
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Mental Health First Aid: A Brief Primer For Attorneys
Amid a growing body of research finding that attorneys face higher rates of mental illness than the general population, firms should consider setting up mental health first aid training programs to help lawyers assess mental health challenges in their colleagues and intervene with compassion, say psychologists Shawn Healy and Tracey Meyers.
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Fla. Insurer-Breach Cases Split On Unrepaired Property Issue
A Florida appellate court's recent decision in Universal v. Qureshi is directly at odds with a 2020 decision from another Florida appellate court, and raises important questions for policyholders and insurers about the proper measure of damages in breach claims involving unrepaired property, say Andrea DeField and Yaniel Abreu at Hunton.
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Revisiting The Crime-Fraud Exception After Key Trump Cases
Evidence issues in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and classified documents cases involving former President Donald Trump offer an opportunity to restudy elements and implications of the crime-fraud exception to attorney-client privilege and the work product doctrine, noting the courts' careful scrutiny of these matters, say Robert Hoff and Paul Tuchmann at Wiggin and Dana.