article thumbnail

The late-May calendar is another 9-case blockbuster

At the Lectern

The Supreme Court today announced it will hear nine cases on its late-May calendar. May is the only month with two argument calendars.) That’s as many arguments as on next week’s large early-May calendar , and it puts the court on pace to issue well over 50 opinions this term. See here and here.))

article thumbnail

Prop. 22, arbitration waiver opinions filing tomorrow

At the Lectern

Quach is expected to decide whether California’s test for determining whether a party has waived its right to compel arbitration by engaging in litigation remains valid after the United States Supreme Court decision in Morgan v. The court granted review in August 2022. Sundance, Inc. 2022) _ U.S. _ [142 S.Ct.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Anticlimax of the Day: Servotronics Case Settles

LettersBlogatory

I had my doubts about whether the Supreme Court would reach the merits of the issue do to a mootness problem. But the parties have told the Court that they expect to case to settle, so the Court has removed the case from the argument calendar. As a result, the circuit split will persist, at least for now.

article thumbnail

How to Keep Multi-Year Cases Organized at Employment Law Firms

CARET Legal

Frequent Legislative Changes The employment law landscape is constantly evolving, with new legislation and court decisions shaping the way cases are handled. An LPMS can enhance team coordination through collaboration features like shared calendars, task assignments, and secure messaging.

Law Firms 111
article thumbnail

High-profile bail opinion filing tomorrow

At the Lectern

This will be a big one: tomorrow morning, the Supreme Court will file its opinion in In re Humphrey. Humphrey will be the second opinion in a case argued on the January calendar. Supreme Court applies deferential standard of review in upholding bail denial in noncapital case.

article thumbnail

Supreme Court Holds FBAR Penalties Are Calculated Per Report

Constitutional Law Reporter

As explained by the Supreme Court, FBAR reports are designed to help the government trace funds that may be used for illicit purposes and identify unreported income that may be subject to taxation. Facts of the Case The Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) and its implementing regulations require U.S.

Court 59
article thumbnail

This Week in Regulation for Broadcasters: October 1, 2022 to October 7, 2022

Broadcast Law Blog

FCC , which rejected the requirement that broadcast licensees independently check two federal databases to verify whether an airtime lessee is a “foreign governmental entity” (see our Broadcast Law Blog article on the Court’s decision here ).