First Circuit: Sullivan v. Marchilli

Souter, Habeas, Crim

State court did not unreasonably apply federal law on the issue, as the allegedly vague prohibition is found in the federal caselaw as well.

Due Process argument that the court would not have determined the image to fall within the statute if the proper First Amendment limits had been followed is irrelevant, since the state appellate review did not unreasonably apply the governing law.


Sullivan v. Marchilli

Eighth Circuit: United States v. Kaylo Roelandt


Fourth Amendment

Given police knowledge of gang affiliation, past felony conviction, and likelihood of retaliatory shootings in the area due to a recent shooting (in addition to, apparently, a CI tip), furtive behavior sufficed for a Terry stop.


United States  v.  Kaylo Roelandt

Eighth Circuit: Patrick A. Dadd v. Anoka County


Prisons, S1983

Deliberate indifference suit states a claim where arresting officers and jail personnel were told of recent dental surgery but withheld pain relievers.  There is no implicit passage-of-time requirment for deliberate indifference claims.

As the timing-based assertion of qualified immunity was nonfrivolous, the other arguments won't be sanctioned.

Patrick A. Dadd  v.  Anoka County

Sixth Circuit: USA v. Ryan Collins - Northern District of Ohio at Akron


Sentencing

Post-verdict jury poll as to appropriate sentence was not an inappropriate factor in sentencing judge's decision.

Sentence was not substantively unreasonable.


USA v. Ryan Collins - Northern District of Ohio at Akron

Fifth Circuit: Hartford Casualty Insurance Co, et al v. DP Engine



Insurance

Under state law, no duty to defend if the policy excludes professional services and all of the actions described in the complaint require professional training.

Given the many theories of harm and recovery, error to rule that duty to defend was coeval with duty to indemnify.

Counterclaims relied on duty to defend. 


Hartford Casualty Insurance Co, et al v. DP Engine

Second Circuit: In re Payment Card Interchange Fee and Merchant Discount Antitrust


Class Actions

Error to certify a class as settlement-only where injunctive and monetary remedies sought created conflicting interests.  Counsel had little incentive to zealously fight for injunctive component, given fee distribution, and class members could not opt-out.

Settlement agreement a nullity.  [Rather a lot of money.]

In re Payment Card Interchange Fee and Merchant Discount Antitrust

First Circuit: Baker v. Harrington


Legal Ethics, Bankruptcy

Misleading characterization of statute and precedent calculated to delay the proceedings is an impermissible artifice of zeal. 
Sanction of having to enroll in a Legal Ethics course upheld.

 Baker v. Harrington

First Circuit: US v. Henry


Corrigenda.

 US v. Henry

First Circuit: Worcester v. Springfield Terminal Railway


FRCP, Erie

In determining when the clock is tolled for filing of an appeal, the critical question is whether the court is involved in ending the last motion filed.  A motion filed and withdrawn without court involvement does not toll the limit, but a motion filed and then withdrawn in a telephone colloquy stops the clock.

 No error in use of common law standard where federal statute had no standard for punitive damages as opposed to borrowing state law standard, given legislation's intent of standardizing the remedy and the background principles of common law against which Congress legislates.


Worcester v. Springfield Terminal Railway

First Circuit: US v. Casey


Corrigenda.


US v. Casey

First Circuit: Rivera-Rivera v. US


Ineffective Assistance, Interstate Commerce

No ineffective assistance in lack of objection to interstate commerce element to mall robbery, as subsequent appellate review said that the trial court ruling would have been upheld in de novo review

Dissent -- In dicta.

Rivera-Rivera v. US

Federal Circuit: WELLS FARGO & COMPANY v. US

Tax

Given the background of merger law against which the rules were set, historical tax overpayments and underpayments of companies composed of merged entities can be considered as a single amount, so long as no amounts are offset which were incurred by two companies which both had a distinct existence at the time of the payments.

(Reminder, as always, quick paraphrase of court on matter of public concern -- don't rely.)


WELLS FARGO & COMPANY v. US

Tenth Circuit: Nelson v. United States

Torts, FTCA

So long as the relevant acts of the landowner were purposeful, implicit invitation to use land for recreation can be imputed, even where the landowner subjectively believes the visitor to be a trespasser.

Willful or malicious conduct is best determined by the finder of fact, not on appeal.

Nelson v. United States

Ninth Circuit: USA V. NICHOLAS LINDSEY

Fraud

Where a lender requests specific information, the information provided is considered material to the lender's deliberations.


USA V. NICHOLAS LINDSEY

Ninth Circuit: USA V. ROGELIO LEMUS


Denial of en banc

Amended opinion

USA V. ROGELIO LEMUS

Eighth Circuit: United States v. Juan Johnson

Sentencing

Despite ministerial omissions, sentence not procedurally unreasonable, as court seemed to be aware of the relevant factors.

Sentence for violation of terms of supervised release not substantively unreasonable,  as it was within the maximum for the original offense of conviction.

No error in not recusing.


United States  v.  Juan Johnson

Eighth Circuit: Carlos Rivas-Quilizapa v. Loretta E. Lynch


Immigration


Statements in interview establishing that the country was a dangerous place did not mandate that the IJ advise the petitioner of forms of relief.

Facts that would have been the basis of a claim were in evidence.


Carlos Rivas-Quilizapa  v.  Loretta E. Lynch

Eighth Circuit: United States v. Melvin Blackmon

Sentencing

Sentence not substantively unreasonable.

 United States  v.  Melvin Blackmon

Eighth Circuit: Danny Connor v. CO 1 Box

Prisons

Dismissal of S1983 claim was improper, given claim's suggestion that officials thwarted attempts to file grievances.  Leave to amend was properly denied.

Danny Connor  v.  CO 1 Box


Eighth Circuit: Donnie Cooper v. General American Life Ins. Co

FRCP

Denial of statutory penalty & attorneys fees, as there was no asserted or actual breach of insurance policy terms.

Donnie Cooper  v.  General American Life Ins. Co.

Eighth Circuit: United States v. Michael Lindsey

Sentencing, ACCA

As the challenge to the existence of the predicates in the PSR was untimely and did not make a showing as to why an untimely challenge should be allowed, the convictions are considered to be undisputed facts.

State assault statute that proscribes acts that cause the fear of assault is a valid ACCA predicate.


United States  v.  Michael Lindsey

Eighth Circuit: United States v. Christopher Fisher


Sentencing

Per curiam -  within-guidelines sentence for violations of supervised release not substantively unreasonable.


United States  v.  Christopher Fisher

Seventh Circuit: William Charles Construction v. Teamsters Local Union 627


Labor Law, Statute of Limitations, Arbitration

Clock did not begin to run on the time to challenge a decision of a committee authorized by a CBA until the movant received a copy of the notice of decision at the commencement of litigation.
.
Where a contract explicitly supersedes the CBA and establishes an exclusive remedy, party is not bound by CBA arbitration outcome.

Special appearance at arbitration to dispute its validity does not establish consent to arbitration.

William Charles Construction v.   Teamsters Local Union 627

Seventh Circuit: USA v. Alexis Miranda-Sotolongo

Fourth Amendment, Sentencing

Check of license plate registration in a database is not a Fourth Amendment search. 

Where the facts are ambiguous, the stop is lawful, so long as the possibility of illegal activity is sufficiently probable.

Supervised release conditions (including earning GED) remanded for clarification.

USA v.   Alexis Miranda-Sotolongo

Seventh Circuit: Joseph Felton v. City of Chicago


S1983

S1983 excessive force suit states a claim if the only evidence to the contrary is in newspaper stories outside of the record.


Joseph Felton v.   City of Chicago

Seventh Circuit: USA v. Saliou Mbaye


Fraud, Crim, Sentencing

Testimony of co-defts and lack of tax reporting established sufficient evidence for bank fraud.

Obstruction enhancement appropriate where deft sticks to alibi on the stand.

Within guidelines sentence substantively upheld.

USA v. Saliou Mbaye




Seventh Circuit: Jack Brown v. Kevin Smith


ADA


Question of essential function is for the fact-finder, even where local government holds the qualification to be a prerequisite for the position.

Time allocation was a fair method of determining essential nature of function.

No claim for lack of mitigation, as there was only one bus company in town, and plaintiff started his own business.

Jack Brown v  Kevin Smith

Seventh Circuit: USA v. Juan Adame


Crim, Interstate commerce, FRE


Sufficient evidence on merits.

Use of building for rental establishes interstate commerce requirement of the arson statute.

Historical cell site data admissible under Daubert, since it was appropriately qualified.  Ultimately harmless.

Agent testimony variations from deposition are not properly considered here, since the record was not amended to include the deposition version.

Fact that deft talked about fire on incidental audio associated with video allowed into jury room not overly prejudicial.

USA v.   Juan Adame

Seventh Circuit: Noah Dietchweiler v. Steve Lucas


Due Process

Per curiam -- Due process satisfied for high school suspension where there was notice of the general allegation and a chance to be heard, despite lack of date-specific accusation of drug use.

Concurrence (2) -- troublingly unspecific notice.


Noah Dietchweiler v.  Steve Lucas

Seventh Circuit: Arlene Simpson v. St. James Hospital


Discrimination, Title VII

Anecdotal evidence insufficient to establish valid comparators.


Arlene Simpson v. St. James Hospital

Seventh Circuit: Chun Sui Yuan v. Loretta E. Lynch

Immigration

Insufficient substantial evidence for agency's adverse findings on credibility.


Chun Sui Yuan v.   Loretta E. Lynch

Fifth Circuit: Mary Smith, et al v. Regional Transit Authority


ERISA, Agency

IRS standard is the appropriate test for determining, for the purposes of ERISA, if a private company is an agency or instrumentality of a government body, and by this standard, the private company that operates the transit system qualifies.

Deft not estopped from invoking governmental exemption, as the terms of the statute control.

Statute of limitations ran from first letter saying that some claims would not be funded.

PArty asserting discovery violation has to establish significance of the evidence sought.

Mary Smith, et al v. Regional Transit Authority

Fifth Circuit: Patricia Morris v. Town of Independence, et al

Discrimination

Given window clerk's part-time status and sui generis duties, there were no relevant comparators to test a claim of racial discrimination.


Patricia Morris v. Town of Independence, et al

Fifth Circuit: Noris Rogers v. Pearland Indep School District

FRCP, Title VII,

Mere statement asserting claim is not enough to preserve disparate impact theory of claim.

Difference between comparator's criminal record and that of plaintiff establishes that they are not similarly situated.

Dissent: Comparator valid, since the relevant bit is that the convictions were not disclosed on the application form.


Noris Rogers v. Pearland Indep School District

Fourth Circuit: Sutasinee Thana v. Board of License Commissioners


Jurisdiction, First Amendment, FRCP

Federal action challenging state liquor control agency restriction on First Amendment grounds is not an imprudent challenge to state court authority via the federal system, since (1) the prudential abstention doctrine technically only applies to holdings of the state's top court; (2) the challenge is to the agency action, not to the court; (3) administrative actions are categorically removed from prudential abstention; (4) the state proceding was a deferential review on merits, and the federal case is seeking damages from violations of the First Amendment; and (5) plaintiff is still actively pursuing the state appeal.


Sutasinee Thana v. Board of License Commissioners

Fourth Circuit: Stella Andrews v. America’s Living Centers, LLC

FRCP, Fees

Award of costs for repetitive litigation can include fees where provided by statute at issue or equitably justified by the conduct of the plaintiff.

Circuit split flagged.

Where refiling is not in bad faith, wanton, or oppressive, award of fees is precluded.  Here, Magistrate explicitly suggested refiling action.


Stella Andrews v. America’s Living Centers, LLC

Fourth Circuit: John Vannoy v. Federal Reserve Bank


FMLA, ADA

Letter to employee regarding the medical leave did not comport with statute, since it didn't mention right to restoration of status.

Assertion of prejudice by plaintiff makes the lack of notice a genuine issue of material fact for the fact-finder at trial.

Plaintiff must make an evidentiary showing of pretext to present a genuine issue where deft has established a bona fide reason for the allegedly retaliatory act.

No equitable basis for ADA claims.


John Vannoy v. Federal Reserve Bank

Second Circuit: OneWest Bank, N.A. v. Robert W. Melina


FRCP

A national bank is considered to be a citizen of the state which its articles of association designate as the location of its main (head) office, regardless of the location of its principal place of business.

OneWest Bank, N.A. v. Robert W. Melina

Second Circuit: Weiland v. Lynch


Immigration

Per curiam -- given recent S.Ct. U.S. holding, interstate commerce element of the federal law is not considered when comparing a state statute to a federal statute to determine whether the state statute qualifies as an aggravated felony for Immigration purposes.

Weiland v. Lynch

First CIrcuit: US v. Bermudez-Melendez


Sentencing

Appeal waiver doesn't bar challenge where term in agreement was that sentence would be in accord with recommended sentence.

Where there is no guidelines range, statutory minimum is the range, and variances must be justified.

Court had no duty to explain variance prom plea deal level -- general description of facts sufficed to explain upward variance.  Sufficient consideration of personal history.

Rhetorical flourishes are permissible during imposition of sentence.

Community-protection rhetoric in imposition of sentence is permissible when framed as an aspect of general deterrence.

Substantively reasonable.


US v. Bermudez-Melendez

First Circuit: Paret-Ruiz v. US

Forfeiture, Takings

The statutory remedy is the sole remedy for challenging a civil forfeiture, even when the underlying criminal case doesn't result in conviction.  Waiver of that process waives FTCA remedy.

Court of Claim is sole venue for a Constitutional claim based in the taking -- amount in question here prevents court from having jurisdiction.

No clear error in denial of malicious prosecution clam, as evidence in record supports fact-finder's determination that one of the agents believed the deft to be guilty/


Paret-Ruiz v. US

DC Circuit: National Fed. of the Blind v. DOT


Administrative

Specific statutory right of action  against agency displaces APA review -- the challenge should have been filed with the court of appeals.

Confusion over venue was not sufficient reasonable cause to waive the filing date requirement.


National Fed. of the Blind v. DOT

DC Circuit: Florent Bayala v. DHS


FOIA

Withholding of single document means FOIA claim is not moot - plaintiff's averment that the document is no longer being sought means that administrative exhaustion is moot, though.

As administrative exhaustion is not jurisdictional, remand to consider whether gov't litigation strategy comports with statute.


 Florent Bayala v. DHS

DC Circuit: Sierra Club, et al v. FERC

Standing, Environment

Member living under a mile away gives associational standing to challenge increased constuction and output at natural gas port, given construction plans.

Environmental analysis was a substantial part of the export strategy, so not moot.

Intervening causation defeats challenge to export strategy by challenging port expansion.

Foreseeable and proximte effects on national markets required for cumulative analysis.

Shift in metrics not raised in agency proceedings


Sierra Club, et al v. FERC

DC Circuit: Sierra Club v. FERC

Standing, Environment

Organization meets causation and redressibility requirements for associational standing in challenge to an increase in natural gas production levels due to member who fishes in the area, given the presumptive increase in tanker traffic.

On merits, claim that increasing production at this port will lead to exports, causing domestic harms is flawed, because it relies on an intervening act - a decision to increase exports.

Agency hard look did not have to take a hard look at other projects occurring outside the jurisdiction which might have had a cumulative effect.


Sierra Club v. FERC

USA v. State of Washington

Treaties

Culvert construction, by diminishing the number of fish, violates fishing rights terms in treaties with tribes.

Abrogation of treaty rights requires legislation -- agency action doesn't constitute waiver.

 State cannot compel FG to limit culvert construction, as it has no standing to assert treaty rights, and the action is barred by sovereign immunity.

Injunction not overbroad -- was a valid exercise of equitable discretion to order state to remedy rather than the FG through the state, since the state held title to the culverts.


USA v. State of Washington

Ninth Circuit: Lia Lingo v. City of Salem


Fourth Amendment, Exclusionary Rule, S 1983

Exclusionary rule does not apply in S1983 actions.

Scent of MJ gave probable cause for arrest, even if it came from a candle.


Lia Lingo v. City of Salem

Seventh Circuit: USA v. Leo Stoller

FRCrimP

Counsel's assurance of no custodial sentence was not sufficient basis to challenge voluntary nature of guilty plea.

No abuse of discretion in denial of competency hearing where deft's physician suggests that deft is exaggerating the symptoms of early dementia.

Insufficient coverage of required points during plea colloquy was harmless error.


USA v. Leo Stoller

Seventh Circuit: USA v. Jonathon Sainz


Sentencing

As restitution amount was substantively reasonable, it was not an abuse of discretion to omit certain elements of guidance in precedent.

Where the reason for the release conditions is plain, little or no explanation is needed.  Modification to some terms to allow purchase of hamburgers, Internet access, etc.


USA v. Jonathon Sainz

Seventh Circuit: Panther Brands, LLC v. Indy Racing League, LLC

FRCP

The fact that National Guard administrative regulations are implicated is not a basis for federal jurisdiction.

As the delegate of the Guard exercised no independent rulemaking authority, no removal under Federal Officer.

Amendment of claim to remove US as party established that removal under federal scope of employment statute would be inappropriate.


Panther Brands, LLC v.   Indy Racing League, LLC

Seventh Circuit: Kenneth Ogurek v. Jeffrey Gabor

Prisons

Claim of retaliation after letter to warden was a violation of First Amendment right to petition for redress of grievances. 

Claim of innocence was sufficient showing to require production of videotape.  Summary judgment in favor of the party who had earlier refused to produce the tape was error.


Kenneth Ogurek v.   Jeffrey Gabor

Seventh Circuit: James Baptist v. Ford Motor Company

Employment, FRCP

Genuine issue of material fact exists in state retaliatory-discharge claim where there is doubt as to the reason for the end of employment,


James Baptist v. Ford Motor Company

Seventh Circuit: USA v. Dante Graf

FRCrimP

Ineffective assistance of counsel in not informing deft that he could move for the disclosure of the identity of a confidential informant is not per se a basis for the subsequent withdrawal of guilty plea.  Insufficient showing under Strickland.

Fairness and justice requires that court look to see whether actual guilt or innocence is implicated.

Circuit split flagged.

USA v.   Dante Graf

Fifth Circuit: State of Texas v. EEOC, et al

Standing, Discrimination, Administrative

State has Article III standing to challenge EEOC employment guidance, as it would have to either change its hiring policies or incur costs. 

Since the agency, although it has no enforcement authority, can make policy changes that cause injuries sufficient for Article III harms, lack of enforcement power is not a per se bar to the action being sufficiently final under the APA.

Safe harbors and definitions for key terms speak to finality.

An agency can alter rights without issuing guidance that courts are legally bound to defer to.

Dissent.  Nope, and not ripe, either.


State of Texas v. EEOC, et al

Fifth Circuit: Richard Jordan, et al v. Marshall Fisher, et al

Reissue:  Denial of En Banc



Richard Jordan, et al v. Marshall Fisher, et al

Third Circuit: In Re: Nickleodeon Consumer Pr


Standing, ECPA, Preemption, Torts

Disclosure of online user data sufficiently particular & concrete for Article III standing.

One-party consent under the wiretap act & corresponding state statute has no implicit age restriction.

 PCs are not protected computing facilities under SCA
.
 State statute requires something beyond access to data - must establish use.

Search engine not covered by video privacy statute; that statute requires something more than an identifying number, since an observer must be able to associate a person with specific content.  This holding cannot be reduced to a single sentence.

As claim derives from the expectation of privacy on the website, state intrusion on privacy tort not preempted by federal data statute.  

Third party cookies on site don't present a cause of action under the tort, but standard tracking might, if duplicitous.



 In Re: Nickleodeon Consumer Pr

First Circuit: Universal Truck & Equipment Co v. Caterpillar, Inc.

FRCP

Where a plaintiff fraudulently joins a deft to defeat diversity, the clock for deft to remove over the fraudulent joinder runs from first service.  Here though, the plaintiff waived challenge to the lack of timely removal by not contesting the untimeliness of the theory of removal while contesting the removal itself.  The post-deadline removal was in the jurisdiction of the court.  Law of the case holding that the removal was ultimately timely prevails.

Summary approval of summary judgment.


Universal Truck & Equipment Co v. Caterpillar, Inc.

First Circuit: Velez-Ramirez v. Commonwealth of Puerto Rico

ADA

Denial of reasonable accommodation is neither an actual nor a constructive discharge for purposes of the Act.

Automatically generated notification via company intranet sufficed for notice, despite actual notice that employee was not in the office.


Velez-Ramirez v. Commonwealth of Puerto Rico

First Circuit: US v. Hunter


Sentencing

No error in denying sentencing adjustment for acceptance of responsibility where a deft who later pleaded guilty took affirmative steps to cover up the crime and later made no showing to the contrary.

In assessing criminal history for purposes of sentencing, offenses without an intervening arrest are to be counted together only if imposed on the same day or contained in the same charging instrument.

Within guidelines sentence not substantively unreasonable.


US v. Hunter

Federal Circuit: BASCOM GLOBAL INTERNET v. AT&T MOBILITY LLC


Patent


(Which, we say again, we really don't know all that well.  Rely on nothing on this website.)

Although each element of the process may be individually untenable, an ordered combination of claim limitations, considered holistically, might state a claim to be considered a single practical, particular application of the idea.

C in J: Bifurcation of eligibility/patentability is problematic.

 BASCOM GLOBAL INTERNET v. AT&T MOBILITY LLC

Federal Circuit: OAKVILLE HILLS CELLAR, INC v. GEORGALLIS HOLDINGS, LLC


Trademark


Similarly spelled unfamiliar marks are sufficiently different.

OAKVILLE HILLS CELLAR, INC v. GEORGALLIS HOLDINGS, LLC

Eighth Circuit: United States v. Adrian Lomas


Crim, FRE, Sentencing

Admission of evidence that deft threw away a gun before the robbery not an abuse of discretion, as it established a knowledge of firearms.

Police evidence that they were in the area because of shots fired at a school was insufficiently prejudicial to justify a new trial.

Other hearsay, vouching challenges.

Sentencing.


United States  v.  Adrian Lomas

Eighth Circuit: Madonna Massey-Diez v. U of IA Community Medical etc


FMLA

Plaintiff's stated willingness to find ways to work while incapacitated meant that repeated tasks requested by employer during leave time were not contrary to the statute.

No discrimination in nonrenewal of contract, since comparator was in a rural area with different methodologies, and there was insufficient direct proof of discrimination.


Madonna Massey-Diez  v.  U of IA Community Medical etc

Eighth Circuit: Paul Ngugi v. Loretta E. Lynch


Immigration

Denial of withholding of removal under CAT upheld, as resistence to an armed gang is not a recognizabel social group; apparently contrary precedent since decision merely meant that the group didn't have to be oculary visible.


Paul Ngugi  v.  Loretta E. Lynch

Eighth Circuit: The Finley Hospital v. NLRB

Labor

Provision in CBA requiring a 3% raise on the anniversary of employment was not a bargained-for term that becomes part of the status quo after the end of the agreement; since each worker only received one raise, it could be considered a one-time benefit.

Dissent: One-time nature is an affirmative defense that should be considered when deciding if the union waived continuance of the term, and here, the union didn't waive the continuance of the term.

The Finley Hospital  v.  NLRB

Eighth Circuit: United States v. Alexander Faulkner


Fourth Amendment, ACCA, Confrontation Clause

Affidavit statement that tipster was reliable sufficed for credibility.

 Placement of GPS on car in county outside the scope of the search warrant was a violation of state law, but not one that rises to the level of suppression.

Reputation of deft as drug dealer sufficed for warrant for home.

No confrontation clause in inability to question tipster, as there was no contact with case after the affidavit.

Possession with intent and conspiracy with intent correctly counted as two predicates under ACCA.

United States  v.  Alexander Faulkner

Eighth Circuit: United States v. Garron Gonzalez


FRE

Where the deft agrees to the admission of a recording at trial with the proviso that it be heard in full if requested by the jury during deliberations, no abuse of discretion in allowing the jury to hear it then, even if the tape had not been played in trial.

Substantial evidence.

United States  v.  Garron Gonzalez

Eigth Circuit: United States v. Christopher Strong, Sr.


FRE

Preliminary hearings sufficed for procedural reasonable balancing in weighing evidence of prior bad acts under 403/413.  Severing counts unrelated to 413 was a sufficient remedy.

Exclusion of expert testimony to refute claim that deft pushed victim into path of car was proper, as the incident was primarily proffered to establish that she had been hit by the car.

Where two crimes are specifically barred from being simultaneously charged as they are similar enough to be considered "double counting," an enhancement based on one can be applied with relation to a third crime.


United States  v.  Christopher Strong, Sr.

Eighth Circuit: United States v. Yoirlan Rojas


FRE

Agent's testimony establishing elements of crime was harmless error, given that elements were established, and that the intent element could be inferred from the patterns of activity. 

Fraudulent credit cards suppressed prior to trial were properly introduced to rebut deft's contention that he was unfamiliar with the distinction between credit cards and gift cards.

United States  v.  Yoirlan Rojas

Seventh Circuit: Venita Miller v. GreenLeaf Orthopedic Associate


FRE

No abuse of discretion in denial of impeachment on cross & rebuttal  when impeachment has been accomplished in prior appearance on the stand.

No abuse of discretion in exclusion of diary as present sense impression, as there's no indication that it was a present sense impression.

No abuse of discretion in limited admission to rebut fabrication, given trial judge's understanding of the theories of the case.

Venita Miller v.   GreenLeaf Orthopedic Associate

Seventh Circuit: Nationwide Advantage Mortgage v. GSF Mortgage Corporation


Contracts, Posner

Where one party to a contract initiates a relationship with a stranger to the contract  based on the contractual relationship between to the two parties and unknowingly incurs costs for the counter-party in doing so, the counterparty does not have a claim for unjust enrichment.


Nationwide Advantage Mortgage v. GSF Mortgage Corporation

Seventh Circuit: Marcos Gray v. Marcus Hardy

Prisons

Although individual claims of infestation are insufficient to present a genuine issue of fact, the claim must be assessed holistically.

Harms of infestation present an issue for the finder of fact.  (1984 quote.)

Knowledge of conditions can be imputed to incoming warden (caption not changed).


Marcos Gray v.   Marcus Hardy

Seventh Circuit: Board of Trustees of the Autom v. Full Circle Group, Inc.

Posner, Successor liability

Where a sophisticated buyer acquires a company and there is a genuine issue of continuity of business, the hypothetical nature of a funded pension liability exit payment at the time of acquisition is not sufficient for summary judgment for lack of liability.

Alter ego liability requires fraud.  Probably.


Board of Trustees of the Autom v.   Full Circle Group, Inc.

Seventh Circuit: John Otrompke v. Bradley Skolnik


Posner, Free Speech, Standing


Candidate for admission to the state Bar has no standing to preemptively challenge a an allegedly unconstitutional provision of the rules, since the Bar might decide not to unconstitutionally enforce it.


John Otrompke v.   Bradley Skolnik

Seventh Circuit: Jaded Martinez v. Peter Cahue


Hague Act

Where a parent potentially has rights under state law, but the former spouse's removal of the child to a foreign country was lawful, the emigrating parent may invoke the foreign statute's mandate that the child be returned there after temporarily returning to the state.

Jaded Martinez v.   Peter Cahue

Sixth Circuit: USA v. Ricky Brown


Fourth Amendment

Canine alert on a car and a general reputation of the suspect are insufficient basis for a warrant for the home.

Where the affidavit advances no relevant facts with respect to the residence, the good faith exception is precluded.
 

USA v. Ricky Brown

Sixth Circuit: USA v. Ralph Dennis


ERISA

Health care providers have no direct standing under the Act.

Assignment of the right to payment is sufficient to guarantee derivative standing under the Act.

Where a provider and an insurer have a post-reimbursement recoupment agreement and reversal of payment is not subsequently passed back to the customer, a provider's claim that the insurer has recouped covered costs doesn't state a claim under the Act, since the insured customer is not affected by the question.

 Circuit split hinted at.

USA v. Ralph Dennis

Third Circuit: USA v. Ralph Dennis


Entrapment

Although the government's actions considered individually would not justify the entrapment instruction, where the investigation goes beyond providing the simple menas for committing the crime, their actions should be considered cumulatively.

Past narcotics convictions can establish separate predisposition for those counts.

 OUtrageous prosecution requires conduct substantially beyond entrapment.


USA v. Ralph Dennis

Second Circuit: MPC Franchise, LLC v. Tarntino

Trademarks

The requisite level for scienter under the Lanham Act for fraudulent patent applications is actual knowledge of a competitor's use of the mark.

MPC Franchise, LLC v. Tarntino

Federal Circuit: Per Aarsleff A/S v. US

[Opinion issued under seal. Redacted version to follow.]



  Per Aarsleff A/S v. US

DC Circuit: Carlos Alexander v. WMATA

Discrimination

In considering, for purposes of the statute, whether someone is disabled, courts must also consider whether the employer regarded the person as either having that disability or having a record of that disability.

Under the statute, discretionary administrative exhaustion tolls the borrowed statute of limitations.


Carlos Alexander v. WMATA

DC Circuit: Jeffrey Swaters v. DOT


Administrative

Agency refusal to release specimen from drug test is consistent with regulations, and neither the denial nor the regulation are arbitrary/capricious, given policy objectives.

No constitutional error from denial of discovery.

Jeffrey Swaters v. DOT

DC Circuit: Chris Stovic v. RRRB


Railroads retirement

Act gives courts APA jurisdiction over denials of requests to reopen.

Denial on merits here.


Chris Stovic v. RRRB

DC Circuit: USA v. Juan Vega


Crim

Stream of commerce suffices for circumstantial evidence that deft intended cocaine to reach US.

Sufficient instruction on mens rea.

Urging in closing that jury serve as community conscience and use of first person singular was harmless error, given strength of case.

 False testimony not later corrected by govt was not dispositive.

Not issuing missing evidence instruction on lack of govt records on out of court photo lineups was harmless error.

No Brady violation on late-disclosed photo with attribution problems.

No error in refusal to admit notes frm quesitoning as prior inconsistent statement.

Error in manager/supervisor sentencing bump, as no showing that employees knew they were doing something illegal.

No error in admission of mistaken identification, given curative instruction.

Deft claim that Title III has no extraterritorial application, even if true, would not preclude extraterritorial wiretapping.

No error in denial of cross on why cooperating witnesses were wearing electronic monitoring devices.

Drug making video not overly prejudicial.



USA v. Juan Vega

Ninth Circuit: MK Hillside Partners v. CIR


Tax, Estoppel

Provision in statute giving tax court authority to consider a relevant statute of limitations for individual members of a partnership empowers the court to rule that the statute of limitations has not run at the partnership level.

 No judicial estoppel, as the positions aren't inconsistent.



MK Hillside Partners v. CIR

Ninth Circuit: USA v. Steven Grovo

Crim, Conspiracy

Given the general mens rea of conspiracy, asynchronous contact on computer bulletin board suffices for actions "in concert" as required by the statute.

Active participation on a bulletin board suffices to prove furtherance of the board's common goal.

Communication with a closed community can constitute advertisement.

Where victim was harmed by both image and subsequent viewing of image, restitution must be disaggregated.


 USA v. Steven Grovo

Eighth Circuit: United States v. Yousef Qattoum


Crim.

No abuse of discretion in denial of motion to withdraw plea of guilty, as the deft was likely aware of illegal nature of conduct since he had, among other things, been arrested for it previously.

Use of money orders created a tacit understanding of conspiracy to launder money sufficient that there was no plain error in denial of motion to withdraw guilty plea.


United States  v.  Yousef Qattoum

Eighth Circuit: Bonnie Dick v. Dickinson State University


Torts.


State statute of limitations appropriately borrowed.

A claim alleging a denial of reasonable accommodation is a discrete instance, one that does not require a comprehensive review of the history.

Insufficient factual basis for adverse employment action claim.

Evidence outside of the statute of limitations period does not create a genuine issue of material fact for purposes of summary judgment.


Bonnie Dick  v.  Dickinson State University

Seventh Circuit: ACF 2006 Corp v. Timothy Devereux

Easterbrook, Contract, Fees

Quantum meruit adjustment to factual findings at trial.

Funds held in a non interest bearing (IOLTA) account are not subject to prejudgment interest.  (Possibly.  Confusing.)

Victims of lawyer's taking of client funds while practicing in an LLC have a priority claim over a later-erfected secured interest.


ACF 2006 Corp v. Timothy Devereux

Seventh Circuit: John H. Germeraad v. Myrick J. Powers


Bankruptcy, FRCP, Mootness

A denial of a trustee's motion to modify is analogous to a 12(b)6 dismissal, and is therefore sufficiently final for appeal when not attributable to a technical defect.

Just as 60(b) motion might be filed again with a different theory, the fact that the trustee might file several motions does not affect their finality for purposes of review.

As the proposed change would relate back to the filing date of the motion, the expiration of the plan's timeframe doesn't make the controversy moot.  The fact that denial of discharge is an equitable decision does not affect mootness.

So long as the motion to modify the plan is filed during the pendency of the plan, it is timely.

Although nothing in the Code authorizes a postconfirmation modification to account for increased income, the decision is an equitable one suggested by the purposes of the Code, and is not subjet to any "good faith" requirement.


John H. Germeraad v.   Myrick J. Powers

Sixth Circuit: Gianni-Paolo Ferrari v. Ford Motor Company


Discrimination

As safe employment could be found at the plant, iatrogenic opiod use did not impede the major life activity of working.

No genuine issue of material fact as to whether medical restrictions were pretextual, as the medical evidence is corraborated, and there is no proof that the decisionmakers had reason to doubt the medical opinion.

Insufficient causation for FMLA retaliation claim.

Gianni-Paolo Ferrari v. Ford Motor Company

Fifth Circuit: USA v. Derrick Wheaten

AEDPA, Habeas

Untimely Certiorari petition filed with Supreme Court that is denied without sign that the lateness has been excused does not reset the statutory deadline for filing a subsequent Habeas petition.  Circuit footnote suggesting otherwise dicta.

Missed deadline by counsel in direct review did not constitute abandonment, as petitioner was timely notified of the late filing and sent a Habeas pamphlet.

Incorrect telephone guidance by Supreme Court clerk didn't cancel the fact that petitioner was on notice of the deadline.


USA v. Derrick Wheaten

Fifth Circuit: Keith Harris v. Texas Veterans Commission, et al

Equal Protection, Right to Travel

State statute offering tuition benefits for past military service so long as the student enlisted or was inducted while in the state or a resident in the state has a rational basis, as it encourages positive behavior (enlisting, graduating high school) and keeps other residents of the state from being conscripted.

Right to travel is not implicated, as it imposes no penalty on entrants to the state.  Had it been implicated, portability of of benefit and gratuitous nature of entitlement would suffice for review.

Keith Harris v. Texas Veterans Commission, et al

Fifth Circuit: Carlos Gonzalez v. Able Huerta


S1983, Fourth Amendment

Although the investigative detention was made without reasonable suspicion, reasonable suspicion is too general a principle to be clearly established for purposes of review under S1983.  As there was no caselaw holding that a refusal to produce identification on school grounds was not grounds for reasonable suspicion, grant of immunity was proper.

Dissent: specificity refers to the law, not to the factual situation.

Carlos Gonzalez v. Able Huerta

Fifth Circuit: Ronald Heggemeier v. Caldwell County, Texas, et al

Discrimination

As a similarly situated comparator was also terminated and the variance in the comparator's severance can be explained by differences in their situations, no Title VII racial discrimination claim.

No ADEA retaliation, as termination occurred 21 months after initial complaint, with a lateral transfer interposed.

State statute limiting reduction in pay does not place a restriction on at-will nature of employment sufficient for a property interest in continued employment.  Conceding at-will employment relative to one supervisor ends the property interest generally.

Statute allowing appointment to state office by elected official does not prevent another arm of the government from terminating the employment.

No abuse of discretion in district court's refusal to exercise ancillary jurisdiction over whistleblower claims.


Ronald Heggemeier v. Caldwell County, Texas, et al

Third Circuit: Omar Frias-Camilo v. Attorney General United States


Immigration, FRCrimP, Statutory Construction

As the Immigration statute regards convictions as having an adjudication and a punishment, and circuit precedent regards the linking "and" as conjunctive, the FRCrimP standard of conviction cannot be used to interpret the Act.  Rather, state actions which incorporate either finding of guilt or punishment can qualify.

Omar Frias-Camilo v. Attorney General United States

Third Circuit: Aguedita Ordonez Tevalan v. Attorney General United States

Immigration

Where a petitioner has filed an appeal with the court, the court is not divested of jurisdiction by the agency's granting of a motion to repoen the matter, particularly where the reopening of the case is for ministerial reissuing of orders and decisions.

Where there is objective evidence of inconsistent statements in the record, there is sufficient evidence for an agency's adverse credibility decision.

Insufficient grounds for protection under CAT.

Aguedita Ordonez Tevalan v. Attorney General United States

Third Circuit: Jose Bedolla Avila v. Attorney General United States


Sentencing, Immigration

As the state statute proscribing possession with intent to deliver is analogous to the similar federal statute which has no minimum possession, under modified categorical analysis, the state conviction here is an aggravated felony for sentencing purposes.

Simultaneous removal proceedings by DHS and INS do not offend regulations or Due Process, as there is no direct proscription in the regulations and there was no showing that the simultaneity of the proceedings harmed the petitioner's attempt to present his case.  

Jose Bedolla Avila v. Attorney General United States

Second Circuit: Leeward Construction Co. v. American University of Antigua

Arbitration

Where arbitrator commits in initial proceedings to issue a reasoned award, a reasoned award is required.

While an arbitrator's reasoned award need not delve into every argument raised or provide a line-by-line justification for the award, it must set forth relevant facts and factual findings.

Arguing for the original profit margins on the deal is at least a barely colorable justification for the award of same based on bad faith, which is all that is required.

Leeward Construction Co. v. American University of Antigua

Second Circuit: Smith v. Wenderlich


Double Jeopardy, Sentencing, Habeas

Where a prison term is increased due to offenses committed in prison, the completion of the portion attributable to the initial sentence does not finalize the sentence for purposes of double jeopardy, and a subsequent resentencing to incorporate supervised release is therefore neither contrary to nor an unreasonable application of federal constitutional law.

Smith v. Wenderlich