« May 2007 | Main | July 2007 »

June 2007

11th Circuit Recent Opinions

Yesterday in the 11th Circuit, the Court reversed and remanded Harris v. Coweta County (involving a sheriff's ramming a car to stop a suspect), based on the Supreme Court's decision in the case, styled Scott v. Harris in that court. Our previous discussion of the Supreme Court's decision in that case, reversing the 11th Circuit, is here.

On Friday, the Eleventh Circuit released three published opinions in civil cases involving a FOIA request investigating FEMA's management of hurricane disaster assistance, a Burger King franchisee's standing to bring a false advertising claim against McDonald's, and application of the FLSA to a domestic service employee (applying the Supreme Court's recent opinion in Coke v. Long Island Care at Home).

Continue reading "11th Circuit Recent Opinions" »

11th Circuit oral argument en banc -- a securities case

An alert BME intern was down at the 11th Circuit today for en banc arguments, and had the following report:

The Eleventh Circuit heard oral argument en banc today in Steven I. Weissman v. National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. et al.  The issue before the court was whether NASDAQ enjoyed absolute immunity as a self-regulatory organization (SRO) for the advertisements described in Weissman’s complaint. The complaint contained the allegation that:

Continue reading "11th Circuit oral argument en banc -- a securities case" »

Georgia Supreme Court -- Election Decisions

On Monday, the Georgia Supreme Court issued seven more opinions, including the much awaited decision on the Photo ID case, a case about a Randoph County Board of Commissioners election, and another case involving elections for the Carroll County Board of Education -- just in time for special elections coming up as early as Tuesday June 17. This post covers these election-related decisions -- even though none were decided on substantive grounds.

First, in Perdue v. Lake, an appeal of the injunction issued by a superior court against the enforcement of the 2006 version of the act requiring a photo ID to vote, the Georgia Supreme Court found that plaintiff Lake did not have standing to challenge the act.

Continue reading "Georgia Supreme Court -- Election Decisions" »

11th Circuit -- Recent Cases

The 11th Circuit has released 18 opinions in the last couple of weeks, and we'll summarize them here over the next few postings. Briefly, though, four of the opinions (Rivera, Delgado, Niftaliev and Morales) address similar asylum or withholding of removal claims; and five of the opinions (Martinez, Presley, Dean, Quirante, and Thomas) address various criminal issues, the latter two primarily related to sentencing.

Of the civil cases, two (Edwards and Bodie) interpret Alabama law, two (Asbestos Settlement Trust and Smith) involve some federal procedural issues, and two (Jordan and Dyer) are Section 1983 cases. Finally, there is an interesting decision regarding applicability of the student exception to FICA to medical residents (USA v. Mt. Sinai), a 1st Amendment case involving a South Beach dance club and a noise ordinance (DA Mortgage), and a case analyzing whether the FLSA applies to travel to and security screening at the worksite (Bonilla).

Stay tuned for more details...

U.S. Supreme Court today

Turning to the nation's highest court, SCOTUS issued 3 signed opinions today, including

  • a ruling that establishes a deferential standard on review of a trial court's decision whether to remove a potential juror from a death case based on his or her views of capital punishment,
  • another ruling that reverses the Eleventh Circuit (in a case involving a nude peace sign display), holding that attorneys' fees under Section 1988 cannot be awarded if the plaintiff wins the preliminary injunction battle, but loses the lawsuit war,
  • and an opinion holding that the standard for finding a "willful" violation of the notice obligation under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (which entitles the plaintiff to additional damages, including punitives) includes not just knowing violations, but also reckless disregard of the notice obligation.

The Ninth Circuit was on the losing end of both the capital punishment case and the FCRA case (even though the court correctly interpreted the willfulness standard).

The Court also...

Continue reading "U.S. Supreme Court today" »

Georgia Supreme Court issues 27 opinions

The Georgia Supreme Court today issued 27 opinions.  The count is: 5 general civil cases (including a major tort reform decision, discussed below), 6 domestic cases, 3 habeas cases, 12 criminal cases (including 8 involving murder and/or life sentences), and 1 attorney discipline case.  The opinions are available here and the summaries are here.

Over the next week we will be catching you up on court of appeals decisions (both 11th Circuit and Georgia), as well as this fresh batch of Georgia Supreme Court decisions.

The headline case from today's releases is the decision in the pair of cases, Fowler Properties, Inc. v. Dowland, and vice versa, holding the new offer of judgment statute, OCGA § 9-11-68, unconstitutional as applied to cases filed prior to the statute's enactment. In this slip-and-fall case originally filed in December 2002, the defendant made an offer of judgment of $20,000 after the statute was enacted -- an offer to which the plaintiff did not respond. When the jury found in the defendant's favor at trial, it moved for attorneys' fees pursuant to the statute, which the trial court found reasonable, but denied on the ground that the statute was unconstitutional (on a variety of grounds).

Continue reading "Georgia Supreme Court issues 27 opinions" »

Brought to you by...

  • The premiere litigation boutique in the Southeast.

Recent Posts

Recently on this blog
Recently on other blogs

Disclaimer

  • The information published on this blog is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Information on this blog is not intended to create, and receipt of it does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship. No person should act upon this information without seeking advice from professional counsel.
Blog powered by TypePad