US v. Marcel King



Possible future offender registration requirement is an insufficient collateral consequence of supervised release revocation to prevent mootness after completion of the sentence.


http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2018/06/04/17-10006.pdf

Ninth Circuit: Luther v. Berryhill



SSA ALJ must explain discounting of 100% VA disability finding.


http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2018/06/04/16-55987.pdf

Ninth Circuit: Pacific-Western Bank v. Fagerdala



Purchase of a subset of claims in a class is not per se proof of bad faith; bankruptcy court must consider whether there is either an ulterior motive or a plan to injure the other creditors beyond enlightened self interest.


http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2018/06/04/16-35430.pdf

Ninth Circuit: Hodson v. Mars Inc.


Not disclosing the possibility of child or slave labor in the supply chain doesn't violate state disclosure laws, as the omission does not relate to a physical defect affecting the central function of the product.


http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2018/06/04/16-15444.pdf

Eighth Circuit: A.H. v. St. Louis County, Missouri



Insufficient proof for deliberate indifference S1983 claim relating to jail suicide; a plan to defeat the problem suffices to defeat municipal liability.

Mere performance of the merely ministerial duties exempted from immunity suffices to exculpate from claim.

Improper medical treatment claim can't be brought under disability statutes.


http://media.ca8.uscourts.gov/opndir/18/06/171198P.pdf


Eighth Circuit: United States v. William Marshall



No abuse of discretion in sentencing, as court did not explicitly rely on prosc. assertion that deft left state to avoid a warrant.

Identity theft sentence for florist living under a false name for fear of the mob generally reasonable.  Bare assertion of indigence unsupported.


http://media.ca8.uscourts.gov/opndir/18/06/164499P.pdf


Seventh Circuit: Highway J Citizens Group UA v. TRAN



Deference to implicit agency view that road renovation project falls within NEPA exclusion, since agency approved the program.


http://media.ca7.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/rssExec.pl?Submit=Display&Path=Y2018/D06-05/C:17-1036:J:Easterbrook:aut:T:fnOp:N:2165825:S:0

Seventh Circuit: John Crane, Incorporated v. Shein Law Center, Ltd.



Insufficient personal jurisdiction over out of state counsel under state long-arm statute where all contacts with forum state were incidental to the litigation.


http://media.ca7.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/rssExec.pl?Submit=Display&Path=Y2018/D06-04/C:17-1926:J:Kanne:aut:T:fnOp:N:2165287:S:0


Seventh Circuit: Cheryl Dalton v. Teva North America



Bare statement of diversity of citizenship does not suffice for jurisdiction.

State liability statute required expert testimony on causation; neither a claim of obviousness nor a strict liability theory of claim defeats this.


http://media.ca7.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/rssExec.pl?Submit=Display&Path=Y2018/D06-04/C:17-1990:J:Barrett:aut:T:fnOp:N:2165052:S:0

Sixth Circuit: Sunrise Cooperative v. United States Dep't of Agric.



Agency's regulation of benefit plan foreclosed by Chevron step one: although there have been substantial changes in the business entity, the statute unambiguously qualifies the entity as a legitimate recipient.


http://www.opn.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/18a0104p-06.pdf

Sixth Circuit: United States v. Alejandro Cota-Luna



Court's rejection of plea agreement was an abuse of discretion, as the stated reasons weren't relevant to the defts culpability.  (Deft had no knowledge of the amount of drugs underneath the truck.)

Reassigned on remand.

Concur in J:  legal error in safety valve relief sentencing consideration sufficed for remand.


http://www.opn.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/18a0103p-06.pdf

Fourth Circuit: Kathy A. Netro v. GBMC



Portion of unpaid state court judgment that plaintiff would eventually have to reimburse to the federal government sufficed for Article III injury for the plaintiff.

Statute, although not formally a qui tam statute, effected a partial assignment of claim sufficient for standing.

Delay in payment of judgment not unreasonable, though.


http://www.ca4.uscourts.gov/opinions/171597.P.pdf




Second Circuit: US v. Castillo



Government's premature concession that advisory sentencing guidelines residual clause was void for vagueness did not forfeit the claim, as it's a question of law, and the court can decide on its own.

Offense can be defined for purposes of modified categorical review by combining common law, state codes, and MPC.

Recklessness suffices for the mental state when categorizing manslaughter as a crime of violence.

Under modified categorical review, state manslaughter statute is a crime of violence, as even an omission can(?) require recklessness.

http://www.ca2.uscourts.gov/decisions/isysquery/c03aa681-4808-489f-8380-da2ee3800b29/2/doc/16-4129_opn.pdf#xml=http://www.ca2.uscourts.gov/decisions/isysquery/c03aa681-4808-489f-8380-da2ee3800b29/2/hilite/

Second Circuit: duPurton v. US



New evidence insufficient for coram nobis petition, as it doesn't conclusively establish earlier error.


http://www.ca2.uscourts.gov/decisions/isysquery/c03aa681-4808-489f-8380-da2ee3800b29/1/doc/17-151_opn.pdf#xml=http://www.ca2.uscourts.gov/decisions/isysquery/c03aa681-4808-489f-8380-da2ee3800b29/1/hilite/

First Circuit: Potvin v. Speedway LLC


Property owner has no duty to warn where the danger is open and obvious.

Distracting effects of nearby gas pumps waived as not raised below.

Absent evidence of design defects in statutorily mandated safety devices, no duty to remedy any danger they present.

No abuse of discretion in District Court's substitution of one deft for another, given offer to indemnify.

"Longiloquent" apparently a word. 


http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/17-1993P-01A.pdf

First Circuit: Coskery v. Berryhill



Dicta: Deference to agency view that amendment of regulation didn't have retroactive effect.

ALJ's adverse credibility determination can be upheld on other grounds.

ALJ considered appropriately broad range of evidence.


http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/17-1886P-01A.pdf

First Circuit: US v. Melendez-Gonzales


AUMF for the War of Terror sufficed for statutory tolling of the statute of limitations; the indictment might otherwise have been untimely.

Court's instruction that a group of visitors not attend in full military dress did not, for constitutional purposes, close the courtroom.  Challenge to court's subsequent mention in jury instructions waived for not being raised below.

Prosc. witness description of "fraud" not unfairly prejudicial, possible hearsay harmless error.

Sentencing bumps, including uncharged conduct, established by preponderance; longer sentence for deft convicted of fewer counts not unreasonable.


http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/17-1084P-01A.pdf

First Circuit: US v. Lawson


SORNA -- remand for unexplained upward variance in period of supervised release.


http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/17-1084P-01A.pdf

Signing off for the week.



Much reading to do about early modern law & drama.  Back next week, if the crick don't rise.  Decisions in the interval (including some from yesterday) are water under the dam.  This site is basically an odd mix of work-in-progress, proof-of-concept, and going concern.  In short, I post when I have the time.  Kind of a batting practice, really.  Cheers.

-CB

Fifth Circuit: Marc Veasey, et al v. Greg Abbott, et al


En Banc, Election Law

(Panel of 15)

  (7 + 2 partial* & in the judgment)

*A claim of discriminatory purpose in the passage of a law cannot be based on statements from legislators opposed to the passage of the bill.* (This part not joined by the 2)

In assessing discriminatory effect under the Voting Rights Act, a multi-factor test should be used, as opposed to a bright-line nexus requirement.

No ruling on violations of the 1st and 14th Amendment burden of right to vote, as a finding of statutory violation results in the same remedy.

 Voter ID requirement was not a poll tax before the law was changed to make the ID free, and is still not a poll tax.

Not an abuse of discretion for the District Court to fashion a remedy, as the legislature is out of session.

     Concurrence  (2, both joining plurality, one in part):

Multifactor test good, as 5th invented much of it.

Won't open the floodgates, as courts can closely weigh factors.

                                       Concurrence / Dissent (5)

Not a poll tax.  Opinion otherwise incorrect.  (68pp, mostly findings and merits)

                                       Dissent (3, all in c/d above)

ID requirement still in place, since those who now have the ID must show it.

Judge below made myriad errors.

           Concur/Dissent, Concur in J (1, joining plurality in part)

Discriminatory motive analysis of the plurality re-weighed merits inappropriately.

                                                                        Dissent (6, all non-plurality)

Record justifies reversal on discriminatory purpose.

                                                                        Dissent (2, both in prior dissent)

Record justifies reversal on discriminatory effect.

Dissent (1, Partially joined plurality)

Record justifies affirming on discriminatory intent.

Takeaway (remember, this is quick work) 9 for Remand for multifactor test on discriminatory effect; 8 for affirming on discriminatory purpose (7 for remand); 14 for the lack of Poll Tax violation; 3 for egg salad; 2 for pastrami.


Marc Veasey, et al v. Greg Abbott, et al