Tag Archives: Purdue Pharma

Supreme Court Potpourri for $200

Normally, at this time of the term, there is a lot to talk about.  But this year’s docket is weird in having a lot of associated cases.  As such, the meaning of one case is not clear until you have all of the related cases.  Some terms, you will get all of the related cases on the same day.  But, in other years, like this year, the release seems to be like that leaky sink faucet . . . drip, drip, drip.

This past week, we had opinions in nine cases out of the twelve/thirteen cases left.  But many of them are related to the three/four cases left.  We had three big administrative law cases, but there is one administrative law case left for an opinion tomorrow.  We had one opinion on Free Speech and social media, but there are the two cases (and one or two opinions) left for tomorrow.  And we had cases on the charges against the January 6 defendants (and a bribery case that is also significant) but we have the presidential immunity case that will put a potential gloss on both of those decisions.  So that covers six of the nine opinions from this past week.  What’s left are the emergency abortion case, the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy case, and a municipal ordinance on homeless individuals sleeping on public property.

The abortion case, Moyle v. United Statesinvolves the conflict between Idaho’s rather draconian abortion law (which apparently only permits abortions to save the life of the mother) and the federal law on Medicaid which requires hospitals that receive Medicare to provide medically appropriate treatment (including to save the health of the patient).  Oversimplified the question is whether the Idaho statute in some way controls what is medically appropriate in Idaho or does the federal law mandate that doctors provide abortions when medically necessary even if the abortion would otherwise violate Idaho law.  The problem is that Idaho brought this case on an emergency stay request from the lower court order granting a temporary injunction and was one of the rare cases in which the U.S. Supreme Court took an appeal before the appellate court had considered the issues.  It became clear during argument that the theories of the parties on how these two statutes relate were still evolving.  So the majority of the Supreme Court decided to “dismiss as improvidently granted,” or, in plain English, the majority said that they made a mistake in taking the case as it was not (yet) ready for Supreme Court review.  While the judgment of the court is simply a one paragraph order returning the case to the Ninth Circuit for the initial appellate review, there were multiple opinions related to that order.    Justice Kagan, in an opinion joined by Justice Sotomayor, finds that it was inappropriate to take the case but suggests that Idaho is unlikely to prevail on its position that its law takes precedence over the federal statute.  Justice Barrett, joined by the Chief Justice and Justice Kavanaugh emphasized how the positions of the parties had changed since the Supreme Court took the case with the federal government disavowing the potential interpretation of its position on which Idaho based their claim for relief and Idaho relaxing what needs to be shown to support an emergency abortion.  As such, Justice Barrett felt that the need for the Supreme Court to address the novel claims on an expedited basis no longer existed.  The bottom line of these five justices is that there is no need to stay the lower court ruling and that the case should return to the lower courts to address the new positions of the parties.  Justice Jackson wrote a separate opinion agreeing that the stay should be vacated but arguing that the Supreme Court should resolve the merits now rather than sending the case back to the Ninth Circuit.   (While it is possible, and significant as far as who is writing the presidential immunity case, that Justice Jackson’s opinion started out as the majority opinion, I tend to doubt it from the text of the opinions.  Justice Jackson’s opinion does not read like an almost majority opinion, and the reasons for dismissing the case are not new.  Justice Alito’s dissent (joined by Justice Thomas and Justice Gorsuch) is along the lines of “how dare the Biden Administration use the law to frustrate our desire to allow stringent anti-abortion laws.” Continue Reading...

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End of Term

The Supreme Court picked up the pace this week, issuing nine opinions over two days.  At this point, the next opinion day is Wednesday.  As there are at least twelve opinions left, there is a good chance that Thursday and Friday will be added.

This week’s opinions included the last opinion from November which, as expected, went to Chief Justice Roberts.  Justice Kavanaugh had a December opinion which, as noted last week seemed to be the most likely. outcome in terms of which justice would join Justice Gorsuch and Chief Justice Roberts on the final three cases from December.  The other two cases — Purdue Pharma and Jarkesy — will more likely than not be authored by Justice Gorsuch and Chief Justice Roberts.

For January, as predicted last week, Justice Kagan had the opinion in the Confrontation Clause case leaving only the two Chevron deference cases.  It seems highly likely that there will be one opinion authored by Chief Justice Roberts or a lead opinion authored by the Chief Justice and a brief unsigned per curiam opinion in the other case. Continue Reading...

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Supreme Court Term 2023-24 — Two Weeks to Go (?) Update

This past week, the U.S. Supreme Court went from one opinion day (Thursday) per week to two opinion days (Thursday and Friday).  But the Supreme Court only issued three opinions on each day — four of the six have some political significance and so there will be posts on them later.  There are still 23 cases left to be decided (with 21-23 opinions) between them.  Thus unless, the pace of opinions picks up (and maybe 4 per day is likely), the Supreme Court needs at least seven opinion days between now and June 28.  The next opinion day is this Thursday.  While it is more likely than not that opinions will also be released on Friday, that would still leave four or five opinion days for the last week in June.  Maybe the last opinion day will be July 1 or July 2, but the Supreme Court tries really hard to leave town before July 4.

With this week’s opinion release, the dust has started to settle on who likely has what opinion.  Until opinions are released, such guesses are who likely initially got the opinion.  While not common, splits in how to decide a case and justices changing their minds as they dig further into writing an opinion can result in opinions being reassigned.  These predictions are based on the Supreme Court’s practice of trying to maintain a balanced workload — both within each month’s argument session and across the term as a whole.

At this point, enough opinions have been released to identify who still has opinions left to write from the first five months of arguments with two question marks.  The two question marks are two sets of companion cases — one from January in which two cases seek to overturn Chevron deference (a doctrine created by Justice Scalia that has courts deferring to administrative agencies over the proper interpretation of ambiguous regulatory statutes) and the other from February in which two cases involve state attempts to regulate interstate social media websites.  For both sets, it is possible that the Supreme Court will issue separate “authored” (i.e. the justice writing is identified) or that the Supreme Court will issue one “authored” opinion in one case with a brief per curiam (i.e. the justice writing is not identified) in the second case or that the Supreme Court will issue one opinion covering both cases.  If only one authoried opinion is released in both sets of cases, then things fall more smoothly in terms of the number of opinions per justice through February.  If either set has a second authored opinion, that adds an additional opinion for some justice making things more uncertain. Continue Reading...

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Supreme Court Update — Appropriations and Redistricting

We are at that point of the Supreme Court terms when we are waiting for the other shoe to drop.  All the arguments and briefing for the term is done, and what is left is for the opinions to slowly drip out.  For now, the Supreme Court is only holding one opinion day per week.  That will be changing soon.

In May, we tend to get the older cases (October, November, and December) that have multiple opinions and newer cases (March and April) that were “easy” unanimous decisions.  As we get later into June, we will get the 5-4 decisions from February, March, and April, and the number of cases will pick up.

So far, in May, there have been three opinion days (with one more set for this Thursday).  On those opinion days, we have gotten, two, three, and three opinions.  With eight opinions down, we still have approximately thirty-five opinions (approximately because there are a few cases that could be consolidated) left to come over the next five weeks.  That number is why we are likely to get multiple opinion days per week in the latter part of June as we need nine to twelve opinion days. Continue Reading...

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