The Volokh Conspiracy
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While Attention Was on Oral Argument in Trump v. Anderson, the Supreme Court Issued Two Opinions
Things you may have missed between the Trump disqualification case, Biden special counsel report, and NBA trade deadline.
The oral argument in Trump v. Anderson was not the only activity at the Supreme Court yesterday. The Court also issued opinions in two argued cases -- the second and third decisions to be released this term.
In Department of Agriculture Rural Development Rural Housing Service v. Kirtz, a unanimous Court held that a consumer may sue the U.S. Department of Agriculture for money damages under the Fair Credit Reporting Act because the Act waived the federal government's sovereign immunity. Justice Gorsuch wrote for the Court.
In Murray v. UBS Securities, the Court held that under the whistleblower protection provisions of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, a whistleblower challenging an employer's adverse employment action must prove that his protected whistleblowing activity was a contributing factor in the employer's unfavorable personnel action, but does not have to prove that the employer acted with "retaliatory intent." Justice Sotomayor wrote for the Court. Justice Alito filed a separate concurring opinion joined by Justice Barrett.
This seems like a a slow pace for the issuance of opinions, but not as slow as last year, when the Court had only issued one opinion in an argued case. In OT 2021, by contrast, the Court had issued ten opinions in argued cases, though several of those (WWH v. Jackson, US v. Texas, Biden v. Missouri, and NFIB v. OSHA) had been heard on an expedited basis. Pre-Covid, at the start of OT2019, the Court had also only issued three opinions in argued cases at this point (though it had also decided two cases summarily with per curiam opinions).
We may get additional opinions later this month.
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Trump v. Anderson will almost surely be out before Super Tuesday.
the second and third decisions to be released this term
No way to run a country...
The UK Supreme Court has four judgments out this year (which I still don't think is very many). Three of them had oral hearings in October, and one of them had its hearing in May.
https://www.supremecourt.uk/decided-cases/index.html
(That one's an interesting one, actually. It's about the liability of hospitals towards the family and other loved ones of patients in medical malpractice cases.)
The opinions were about as exciting as the NBA trade deadline.
Which is to say, not very.
What does that say about lower court decisions that brought these to the SC?
Nothing. Neither the legal system in general nor SCOTUS is about entertainment. Just because the cases weren't exciting doesn't mean they weren't important.
Years ago, when I was a student intern in the EDNY, there were a group of retirees who would come into court every day to watch the proceedings. That was their daily entertainment.
I remember once being in court, and overhearing their conversation. "Hey, Judge X has a big mob trial this afternoon. Get there early to get a good seat."
A century ago in rural America, trials were the entertainment -- particularly murder trials.
Hey now, the Knicks made some moves! Look out Boston. I would say “my knicks” but I have an adoptive team in my adoptive town and I won’t fully be back on the knicks until Dolan sells or dies.
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Who can squeeze opinions into a packed schedule of free superyachting; on-the-house luxury resorting; free socializing with funders and fans of cases you will decide; accepting ornate gifts from newfound "friends"; flouting ethical standards; arranging educational funding for children in your case; speaking at "nonpartisan" fundraisers; concealing your actions; wondering where your next free recreational vehicle might come from; arranging disingenuous cover stories with your ideological allies; and deciding cases in which your spouse, customer, and/or funders have important interests?
(And that's just the stuff they could no longer conceal . . . so far. But times are likely to change. Maybe the ethical rules precipitated by recent revelations could be called the Thomas and Thomas "Never Again" Ethical Standards.)
The UBS case is interesting because it appears to change the standard on all pretextual terminations, e.g. sexual harassment, or mandated reporters reporting abuse. Of course most of those are state laws and in state courts...
It doesn't. For many reasons, including the fact that this decision turned on the language of a specific statute and other statutes that use other language could come out differently.