James L. Kisor, Petitioner v. Peter O'Rourke, Secretary of Veterans Affairs
Case Number:
18-15
Court:
Nature of Suit:
Firms
- Baker Botts
- Brown Wegner
- Covington & Burling
- Gibson Dunn
- Goodwin Procter
- Holland & Hart
- Holwell Shuster
- Hunton Andrews
- Latham & Watkins
- Mayer Brown
- Munger Tolles
- NT Lakis
- Sidley Austin
- Tillman Wright
- Williams & Connolly
Companies
- American Federation of Labor & Congress of Industrial Organizations
- Atlantic Legal Foundation Inc.
- National Association of Home Builders
- National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation
- National Veterans Legal Services Program
- New Civil Liberties Alliance
- Pacific Legal Foundation
- Public Citizen Inc.
- Washington Legal Foundation
Sectors & Industries:
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March 22, 2019
Up Next At High Court: Too Much Deference To Fed Agencies?
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear two significant cases of administrative law this week as it wraps up its March argument session, both asking whether courts are giving federal agencies too much leeway to interpret rules and laws.
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February 26, 2019
'Auer' Should Be Trimmed, Not Tossed, Gov't Tells Justices
Lawyers for the federal government struck a delicate position Monday in a Supreme Court appeal seeking to overturn a pro-agency judicial doctrine that has drawn scorn from conservative judges and academics, asking that so-called Auer deference be "clarified and narrowed" rather than abandoned entirely.
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December 17, 2018
'Auer Someday Will Be Overruled,' Kavanaugh Said In 2016
Justice Brett Kavanaugh predicted two years ago that the U.S. Supreme Court would "someday" overturn a legal doctrine in favor of government agencies known as Auer deference, and he could now be the one to decide whether that happens after the court agreed to review Auer last week.
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December 10, 2018
Supreme Court Agrees To Reconsider 'Auer' Deference
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to reconsider a key precedent of administrative law that tells judges to defer to an agency's interpretation of its own ambiguous regulation, taking up a challenge to so-called Auer or Seminole Rock deference, which has been criticized by several conservative justices on the court.
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