Federal Circuit: Moda Health Plan v. US

Where a statute commits to the government's disbursal of funds from a single program according to a certain formula, subsequent budgetary riders need not place a categorical ban on payment from other sources when limiting the payouts from that program in order to function as a sufficiently clear implied repeal of the initial commitment.

Absent the trappings of a contractual agreement or some sign of intent to enter into a contract, government legislation and subsequent agency rulemaking and conduct does not indicate an intention to enter into a binding contract.

Dissent:  Insufficiently clear statement of repeal, explicit attempts at repeal did not pass, insurers had completed their part of the deal, judgment fund is available, contract existed.

http://www.cafc.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/opinions-orders/17-1994.Opinion.6-14-2018.pdf


Tenth Circuit: United States v. Driscoll

When determining the timeliness of a Habeas petition, the critical element is the right asserted; the question of whether an ambiguous conviction is or is not contradicted by the new rule is a matter for merits consideration.

As the petitioner was convicted under a statute broader than the generic offense, it is more likely than not that they were convicted under the unconstitutional residual clause, justifying the granting of the writ.

On merits, granted as not harmless error.

https://www.ca10.uscourts.gov/opinions/16/16-8118.pdf

Seventh Circuit: Thaddeus Jones v. Michelle Qualkinbush

The right to vote on policy questions in a referendum is a creature of state, not federal, law, and the referendum process is not a public forum under the First Amendment, so a state entity might legitimately dominate the process if there is a reasonable basis for it to do so.

A politician disadvantaged by the state's manipulation of the referendum process is a class of one for Equal Protection purposes, and where the conduct is valid as a general matter, the question is not justiciable.  (This last bit is clearly implied, but not explicitly stated in those terms.)

http://media.ca7.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/rssExec.pl?Submit=Display&Path=Y2018/D06-14/C:17-1227:J:Easterbrook:aut:T:fnOp:N:2170958:S:0

Sixth Circuit: Sazerac Brands, LLC v. Peristyle, LLC

Where a company acquires a historic manufacturing site, a plaintiff claiming infringement of the trademarked name must, to state  claim, establish that the mark associated with the site was not used merely in a good-faith descriptive or geographical sense.

(Though it says that unfair use is part of the necessary claim, the interlocutory order here affects a partial summary judgment.)

http://www.opn.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/18a0113p-06.pdf

Fifth Circuit: Franchise Svc of North America v. United States Trustee

As shareholder rights under the corporate charter are a matter of state law and the power of a corporation to invoke bankruptcy protection arises from local law, the federal public policy interest in assuring the bankruptcy proceeding does not preclude a shareholder from blocking the bankruptcy filing where that shareholder is also a creditor, so long as there is no evidence of bad faith in the acquisition of the blocking shareholder rights.

Whether the acquisition of such rights under the charter violates state law is not before the court, as the parties don't raise it here.

Simple acquisition of a controlling interest in a stock class is insufficient proof of corporate control for purposes of judging breach of fiduciary duty; blocking the filing is not per se proof of such control.

http://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/18/18-60093-CV0.pdf

Fifth Circuit: Gail McClendon v. USA

Regardless of the ultimate burden at trial, a deft's reasonably supported assertion that less than the full amount of taxes due was available for use in the company's accounts presents a genuine issue of material fact for trial.

http://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/17/17-20174-CV0.pdf

Fifth Circuit: USA v. Ronald Ary

Under both state and federal law, a state deferred adjudication for this type of crime qualifies as a valid predicate conviction for sentencing purposes.

An indictment that omits this element of the offense does not offend Due Process, since Apprendi and its progeny specifically except prior convictions.

http://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/17/17-10082-CR0.pdf

Third Circuit: USA v. Christopher Welshans

Where deft stipulated to the prohibited content, error to admit prejudicial videos and refer to them in closing, but no Due Process violation given the overwhelming evidence of guilt.

Deft's deletion of files upon learning that the police were on the way was sufficiently contemporaneous with arrest to qualify for the Obstruction sentencing enhancement, but as the files were simply moved to the recycle file, there was no material hindrance.

Concur/Dissent:  Actions upon learning of investigation are not sufficiently contemporaneous with arrest.

http://www2.ca3.uscourts.gov/opinarch/164106p.pdf


Ninth Circuit: Clifford Tindall v. First Solar Inc.

Where FRCP indicates abuse of discretion review, but the dismissal for not stating a claim would usually prompt de novo, circuit precedent compels a three-judge panel to review the claim for abuse of discretion.

Under Delaware law, the Board's role in financial disclosures and press releases is not a business judgment for the purposes of assessing demand futility, since the releases and disclosures are snapshots of past business decisions.  The correct test looks to general oversight.

Where a court denies leave to amend in a situation where it is usually granted absent prejudice, but the rule merely permits granting for good cause, there is no need to cite or discuss the rule, so long as there is no abuse of discretion of the good cause standard.





Eighth Circuit: Stuart Wright v. United States of America

Local rules mandate that the reply brief to a motion for summary judgment must be in a certain form, not that it must contest all statements of fact not waived.

Under law of the case, basketball player falsely arrested justified the subsequent restraint on his liberty by briefly backing away from the police; this presents no issue for trial.

As the arrest and detention were justified, no abuse of process.

Arrest and tasing midcourt did not rise to the level of assault, as the officers thought that they were arresting a dangerous person.

http://media.ca8.uscourts.gov/opndir/18/06/172274P.pdf


Eighth Circuit: Jonathan Ervin v. Michael Bowersox

State's use of a video at trial showing the invocation of previously waived Miranda rights in the course of an interrogation and references to the video in opening and closing statements were not an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law.

Factual determinations not unreasonable.

http://media.ca8.uscourts.gov/opndir/18/06/171743P.pdf


Eighth Circuit: United States v. Hosea Swopes

State statute is a valid ACCA predicate.

Per curiam, simple assertion of precedent.

http://media.ca8.uscourts.gov/opndir/18/06/161797P.pdf

Eighth Circuit: Jim Sciaroni v. Target Corporation

Class appropriately certified despite court's mistaken finding that class members without present injury would be entitled to a pro rata share of the remainder of the fund.

Class appropriately certified despite potential inter-class conflicts over later-arising harms from the data breach, since all class members suffered the same injury at the same time.

29% Fee award can appropriately be based on a total that includes administrative costs; fees not substantively unreasonable.

Settlement not unfair, despite alleged subtle signs of collusion.

http://media.ca8.uscourts.gov/opndir/18/06/153909P.pdf

Fifth Circuit: Esther White v. Cigna Group Insurance

Abuse of discretion for the Plan Administrator not to mention insurer's medical report asserting that the level of drug intoxication was impossible to determine given the tests run, withhold the report from discovery, and deny the claim.

http://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/17/17-30356-CV0.pdf

Fifth Circuit: USA v. Candido Hernandez-Avila

Given the recent holding of the US Supreme Court defining the age of consent for the general offense of statutory rape, the state statute is not a valid sentencing predicate, as the state statute is stricter, and a strict liability offense.

Government's post-briefing argument that the crime is a crime of violence under the instant provision of the sentencing guidelines refers to an earlier version of the guidelines with materially different language -- the older version cites crimes with a "substantial risk" of violence.

Contention that the sentence would be justified under another part of the guidelines is not properly before the court, as the question is simply whether the current sentence was correctly imposed.

http://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/16/16-51009-CR0.pdf


Fifth Circuit: Edward Busby v. Lorie Davis, Director

Assertion of actual innocence in a second state Habeas that was dismissed summarily with an indication that the court did not reach the merits was not dismissed for procedural default, as the briefing indicates (which would at any rate be a reasonable ruling, since Federal courts are permitted to do such things), but for the alternate reason in the statute, namely that no reasonable juror would have accepted the claim.   As this alternate ground is not challenged, the state denial was not an unreasonable application of facts or federal law.

Second non-AEDPA federal Habeas asserting identical claims is denied on merits.

Ineffective Assistance claim based on direct appeal was not raised in initial state Habeas -- ineffective assistance in collateral proceedings is insufficient excuse for the default of claim, as there is no right to counsel at that stage.

No prejudice from ineffective assistance at trial.


Editorial note:  End the death penalty.

First Circuit: US v. Gonzalez-Negron

Souter, by designation.

No plain error in court's acceptance of plea for possession of a weapon in furtherance of a drug crime where the gun and the drugs were found in separate areas of the residence, given modificaitons to gun and gov't proffer to prove role in drug scheme.

No plain error in colloquy's omission of clarification of "in furtherance," as it is a plain term, and there was no showing that deft would have changed the plea.

http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/17-1302P-01A.pdf

First Circuit: US v. Benitez-Beltran

Territory's crime of Attempted Murder is a valid predicate offense, since (1) Territory's definition of murder requires purposeful or knowing conduct, and the generic offense merely requires reckless indifference; and (2) the act or omission required for the attempt could be counted as the substantial step in furtherance, cf. MPC.

Government's mention of impermissible sentencing factors at sentencing was insufficient to establish that the court relied on them in sentencing.

No substantive error in upward variance, as court developed a theory of recidivism; no error in court's using arguments offered in mitigation as factors weighing in favor of a higher sentence, given the concern with recidivism.

No substantive error for a ten-year felon-in-possession sentence to be served consecutively to the existing 90 year sentence for aggravated robbery.

http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/17-1161P-01A.pdf

First Circuit: US v. Serrano-Acevedo

Insufficient articulable grounds for a protective sweep where two armed men robbed a bank, and both had been detained prior to the sweep through the house.

Subsequent consent to search was tainted by the fruits of the sweep.

Court's instruction sufficient to cure in-court statement by police officer saying that the robbers had been identified to him by name by an informant.

Other hearsay harmless. 


http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/16-2009P-01A.pdf

First Circuit: US v. Tanco-Pizarro

In a revocation of supervised release proceeding, challenges raised for the first time in a motion to reconsider the sentence are not preserved for appeal.

Absent a showing of potentially exculpatory evidence, no plain error in denial of discovery and continuance in revocation hearing, given indictment handed down in a parallel proceeding,.

No plain error in considering the magnitude of the offense and the need for just punishment in the revocation proceeding, as they speak to the magnitude of the breach of trust in the parole violation.

Prior compliance with parole waived for not being raised below.

No plain error in an upward variance five times the upper limit of the range, as adequately discussed at sentencing.

Substantively, no abuse of discretion in the sentence, as it's not implausible or indefensible.