I’m on a summer vacation road trip, blog posts will resume upon my return next week! I hope you are having an enjoyable summer with quality air conditioning. I also recommend that you see “Oppenheimer” — with or without seeing “Barbie” — as it offers some powerful insights about civil procedure run amok in Oppenheimer’s security-clearance hearings.

After a well-publicized debacle in New York involving “research” in which ChatGPT invented nonexistent cases, the phenomenon of “hallucinatory” generative AI has arrived in Texas. The Waco Court of Appeals recently faulted a lawyer for providing a brief with three nonexistent cases (and, like the New York counsel, not responding when the problem was pointed out by the appellee). While there is nothing wrong with using ChatGPT to help with legal analysis and writing, uncritical acceptance of purported caselaw found “on the Internet” is always risky.

The Fifth Circuit found that fact issues about the plaintiff’s discovery of his potential claims precluded summary judgment in Bruno v. Biomet, Inc.:

On the one hand, a jury could reasonably determine that contra non valentem tolled the prescription period until September 2019—given Bruno’s consultations with his doctor, a medical professional. But on the other hand, a jury could just as reasonably determine that contra non valentem tolled prescription until some point in time before September 2019. It is unclear whether Bruno stopped suffering complications from infections after the removal, such that his recovery after the device’s removal would have put him on notice of any fault of Biomet’s before the letter was received.

No. 22-30405 (July 21, 2023).

Hogan v. Southern Methodist University presented, inter alia, the question whether Texas’s Pandemic Liability Protection Act – enacted in 2021 – bars a student’s complaint about SMU moving to an all-virtual learning environment in 2020.

The student argued that this backward-looking application of the law violated the Texas Constitution’s prohibition of “retroactive” laws — a unique feature of that instrument that, like the “open courts” provision, has no counterpart in the U.S. Constitution. SMU, supported by the Texas AG, argued otherwise.

The Fifth Circuit certified this issue to the Texas Supreme Court, noting its importance and the dearth of caselaw on the point to date. No. 20-10433 (July 20, 2023).

The plaintiffs in Clarke v. Commodity Futures Trading Commission sought a preliminary injunction, alleging that their business (the “Predictit Market,” where users can trade on the potential outcomes of future events) would fail after the CFTC changed position on an earlier no-action letter.

Two judges agreed that a preliminary injunction was required as a matter of law–but agreed on little else, as the concurrence noted: “Plaintiffs’ theory of final agency action admittedly conflicts with the precedents of our sister circuits. To my knowledge, no circuit has held that a no-action letter or its withdrawal is sufficient to constitute ‘final agency action’ under the Administrative Procedure Act. And some have held the
opposite.”

A dissent was so unpersuaded on the issue of final agency action that it would not have required a preliminary injunction. No. 22-51124 (July 21, 2023).

Missouri v. Biden, No. 23-30445, presents a high-profile dispute about coordination betwen the federal government and social media platforms to address misinformation. A district court in Louisiana issued an injunction against such coordination and the federal government appealed. That appeal, as do many significant constitutional disputes, implicated the division of responsibility between an initial “administrative stay,” a later “stay pending appeal,” and the resolution of the merits of the appeal. For this case, a Fifth Circuit panel resolved that matter with this order:

 

The arbitration award in Amberson v. McAllen said:

along with some additional explanation of the difference between a “reasoned award” and “Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.” The Fifth Circuit rejected the argument that the arbitrator’s drawing of this distinction kept the award from having collateral-estoppel effect. No. 22-50788 (July 12, 2023).

A&R Engineering sued the Texas Attorney General, complaining about a state law forbidding boycotts of Israel by municipal contractors, and arguing that his enforcement of the law made it lose a valuable contract with the City of Houston. The Fifth Circuit held that A&R lacked standing, concluding:

  1. Injury in fact. “The lost opportunity is connected to a financial loss.  And the loss isn’t speculative. A&R retained records of how much it made in previous contracts ….”
  2. Traceablity. “The economic harm and lost opportunity are traceable to the City. The City after all is the party responsible for contracting with A&R. But it’s unclear how A&R can trace its economic injury to the Attorney General. Traceability is particularly difficult to show where the proffered chain of causation turns on the government’s speculative future decisions regarding whether and to what extent it will bring enforcement actions in hypothetical cases.”
  3. Redessability. “[T]he City’s conduct severs any link between A&R’s economic injury and the Attorney General.  The City told the district court it would follow state law and include the provision. But the City never attributed its actions to any enforcement or threatened enforcement by the Attorney General. A&R’s injury depended on the ‘unfettered,’ ‘independent’ choices of the City, ‘whose exercise of broad and legitimate discretion [we] cannot presume either to control or to predict,’ so the injury isn’t traceable to the Attorney General.”

A&R Engineering v. Scott, No. 22-20047 (July 10, 2023) (all citations omitted). (The Court’s analysis of redressability echoes Justice Gorsuch’s recent analysis of a similar issue in his concurrence for United States v. Texas, No. 22-58 (U.S. June 23, 2023)).

Loy v. Rehab Synergies, LLC allowed a dispute about overtime pay to proceed as a collective action, when the 22 plaintiffs were subject to a similar program that required 90% productivity,” for which “a therapist needed to record 54 minutes of billable time for every hour on-the-clock, leaving the equivalent of just six minutes per hour to complete non-billable tasks.” Given that shared foundation, the Fifth Circuit found no abuse of discretion by the district court in its assessment of the relevant factors. No. 22-40411 (June 21, 2023).

While the Supreme Court issued several opinions in Mallory v. Norfolk Southern Railway, No. 21–1168 (U.S. June 27, 2023), the part joined by a five-justice majority is straightforward. A condition for registering to do business in Pennsylvania is consent to be sued there, and the Court held that condition did not raise a due-process concern, reaffirming the validity of much older precedent on the point. Justice Jackson’s concurrence helpfully distinguishes the concepts of waiver and “minimum contacts.” No. 21-1168 (U.S. June 27, 2023).

Jeanty was arrested, and then released, after Big Bubba’s Bail Bonds posted a surety bond on his behalf. He was then re-arrested after Big Bubba’s complained to the trial court that Jeanty had failed to maintain contact as required by their contract.

Jeanty sued for false imprisonment and Big Bubba’s obtained a Rule 12 dismissal.

Providing a straightforward example of an Erie analsis, the Fifth Circuit reversed. It began with the precedent of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals about the relevant statute, continued by reviewing more recent intermediate-court opinions and finding they were consistent with the earlier precedent, and giving little weight to an advisory opinion from the Texas Attorney General.

Jeanty v. Big Bubba’s Bail Bonds, No. 22-40241 (June 29, 2023).

Just a few days before the Supreme Court’s opinion in 303 Creatiive, a Fifth Circuit panel reached a similar result in a related setting (here, the hiring and workpace practices of a church and a “Christian business”):

[W]e decide that RFRA requires that Braidwood, on an individual level, be exempted from Title VII because compliance with Title VII post-Bostock would substantially burden its ability to operate per its religious beliefs about homosexual and transgender conduct. Moreover, the EEOC wholly fails to carry its burden to show that it has a compelling interest in refusing Braidwood an exemption, even post-Bostock.

Braidwood Management v. EEOC, No. 22-10145 (June 20, 2023).

During a tour of a “24 Hour Fitness” facility, Mr. Sauls fell into an empty hot tub and suffered severe injuries. He and his wife won a verdict for over $1.5 million in damages. But the district court granted judgment as a matter of law under Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b) for the defendants, concluding that the hot tub was an “open and obvious” hazard.

The Fifth Circuit reversed, noting, inter alia: “Mr. Sauls is a 79-year-old man with a hearing impediment. The totality of the particular circumstances Mr. Sauls faced included no prior knowledge of the facility or the location of the hot tub, no warning as to the fact that the hot tub would be empty and located approximately five feet away from the door, and his attention was simultaneously diverted away from the hot tub by 24 Hour Fitness’ tour guide.” Sauls v. 24 Hour Fitness, No. 22-10182 (July 7, 2023) (footnotes omitted).

In May 2022, a Fifth Circuit panel held in Jarkesy v. SEC that the Seventh Amendment’s right to civil jury trial extends to an SEC enforcement action. The full Fifth Circuit later denied en banc review of the matter.

Critics of the administrative state celebrated the ruling as an important limit on agency power; others questioned whether “originalism” was fairly applied to an agency and a set of statutes that did not exist in 1792.

On June 30 of this year, the Supreme Court granted review of Jarkesy, which will be a fascinating addition to the next term of that court:

The question in Allstate Fire & Casualty Co. v. Love was whether “the amount of an insurancy policy or the underlying claim determines the amount in controversy to establish diversity jurisdiction ….” The Court addressed, and clarified, earlier Circuit precedent on that generaly topic, and went on to hold that in this case: “where the claim under the policy exceeds the value of the policy limit, courts … should ask whether there is a legal possibility that the insurer could be subject to liability in excess of the policy limit” (a Stowers claim having been made in this dispute). No. 22-20405 (June 22, 2023).

In United States v. Texas, last Friday, the Supreme Court reversed a Fifth Circuit judgment because Texas had no standing to bring a particular claim about immigration policy. The case echoes the proceedings in California v. Texas, a 2021 matter in which the Supreme Court also reversed a Fifth Circuit judgment for lack of standing — in that case, an issue about the enforceability of the Affordable Care Act.

As Texas’s Attorney General, Greg Abbott famously quipped: “I go into the office in the morning. I sue Barack Obama, and then I go home.” In a recent interview, I suggest that these opinions are a yellow light for that approach to public-law litigation; Mark Stern makes a similar point in more colorful language for Slate. Time will tell whether that traffic signal is heeded.

Two New York lawyers filed a brief with “fake law” in it, having accepted at face value a “hallucination” by ChatGPT abouot several cases that did not in fact exist. The district court has now sanctioned them. The opinion is of broad general interest, given the great influence of generative AI in its few short months of widespread public availability. And it’s also of broad general interest in avoiding sanctions–the lawyers had at least one good chance, and maybe even two, of coming clean about their error, but instead “doubled down” with purported screenshots of the nonexistent cases.

In a recent analysis of a sanctions order, the Fifth Circuit provided an instructive example of an argument that withstood a forfeiture objection:

“Ticket argues that CEATS forfeited the bad-faith argument by failing to assert it in the district court. While it is true that we tend not to entertain arguments that a party asserts for the first time on appeal, ‘an argument is not [forfeit]ed on appeal if the argument on the issue before the district court was sufficient to permit the district court to rule on it.’ Here, CEATS told the district court that a discovery violation ‘must be committed willfully or in bad faith for the court to award the severest remedies available under Rule 37(b).’ CEATS also argued that it did not violate the Protective Order willfully or in bad faith, because the ‘communications … were clearly inadvertent.’ That argument was enough to put the district court on notice that CEATS opposed any definition of ‘bad faith’ that includes inadvertent conduct.”

CEATS, Inc. v. TicketNetwork, Inc., No. 21-40705 (June 19, 2023) (citations and footnotes omitted). (This analysis has an interesting analog in the recent case of United Natural Foods, Inc. v. NLRB, where the majority and dissent disputed whether a particular issue was raised for purposes of the “party presentation” principle).

TicketNetwork, an online ticket marketplace, sued CEATS, a non-practicing IP company, for declarations that Ticket’s business did not violate CEATS’s patents or a related license agreement.

CEATS won at trial, and while its claim for attorneys fees was pending, obtained an order allowing it to see a list of Ticket’s website affiliates. That order restricted access to certain designated in-house representatives.

CEATS’s CEO, who was not supposed to see the list, then sent Ticket’s CEO a settlement demand–attaching the list. After significant proceedings, the district court awarded (1) a 30-month injunction against any dealings with the companies on the list and (2) $500,000 against CEATS, its CEO, and two litigation consultants.

The Fifth Circuit, inter alia:

  • Vacated the award against the individuals: “The Individuals did not receive notice that monetary sanctions were pending against them, and they did not receive a pre-deprivation opportunity to defend themselves at a hearing. By the time the district court heard their response, it had already decided against them. That was an abuse of discretion.”
  • Vacated the injunction: “We also agree with CEATS that the district court did not make the bad-faith finding that is a prerequisite to litigation-ending sanctions under [Fed. R. Civ. P.] 37(b). Instead, the district court found that CEATS acted recklessly, and then it equated recklessness with bad faith. We have rejected that equivalence.”
  • Vacated the fee award: “[T]here was a significant disparity between the rates that the first court approved when it awarded attorney fees to CEATS (at an earlier stage of litigation) versus the rates that it approved when it awarded attorney fees to Ticket (as part of the sanction against CEATS).”

CEATS, Inc. v. TicketNetwork, Inc., No. 21-40705 (June 19, 2023). The Court aptly summarized: “We AFFIRM in (small) part, VACATE in (large) part, and REMAND for further proceedings.”

In Norsworthy v. Houston ISD, the Fifth Circuit acknowledged a recent amendment to Fed. R. App. P. 3(c) about the requirements for a notice of appeal.

In this case, the appellant’s notice of appeal named its Rule 59 motion to alter amend, not the final judgment itself. Under the earlier rule, that language could have given rise to a waiver issue. But a 2021 amendment says that “a notice of appeal encompasses the final judgment,” so long as the notice designates an order named in Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(4)(A), which lists the standard post-trial motions. No. 22-20586 (June 13, 2023).

The Fifth Circuit was unwilling to extend a bankruptcy court’s “core” or “related-to” jurisdiction to reach a settlement agreement when:

[T]he settlements contradict the plan. Whereas the plan discharged debts unless a timely proof of claim was filed, the settlements require Chesapeake to pay the non-filing lessors a portion of their royalty claims far higher than other creditors’ timely filed general unsecured claims. Whereas the plan assumed that Chesapeake’s leases would ride through bankruptcy unaffected, the settlement requires a mandatory alteration in the terms of thousands of Pennsylvania leases. Far from merely enforcing the plan, the settlement accomplished a self-described ‘fundamental reset of Chesapeake’s relationship with its Pennsylvania lessors.'”

No. 21-20232 (June 8, 2023).

The high-profile police-shooting case of Edwards v. City of Balch Springs ended with an affirmance of dismissal on qualified-immunity grounds. Among other holdings, the opinion succinctly captures the challenge in scrutinizing official use-of-force policies in this setting:

“[A] written policy is not facially unconstitutional just because it leaves out ‘detailed guidance that might have averted a constitutional violation.’ If it were otherwise, a use-of-force policy would be facially constitutional only if it recited every jot and tittle of the applicable caselaw. Surmounting that logistical hurdle would produce a behemoth free of any practical use—less a policy than a treatise.”

No. 22-10269 (June 9, 2023).  (The phrase “jot and tittle,” btw, has a Biblical origin related to pen strokes used to write Hebrew.)

An alleged requirements contract for a supply of auto parts did not satisfy the statute of frauds, when it did not say in writing that it was a requirements contract or otherwise establish a quantity, when:

  • The email in question referenced a $10,000 credit limit (“Our credit manager is on the conservative side. He has given you a credit limit of $10K until he sees a credit history pattern. Your terms are net 30 days.t had a $10,000.”) The Fifth Circuit held: “The $10,000 figure is a credit limit; it is not a ‘specif[ication of] a quantity’ of goods that Wesden would buy from ITW.”
  • The email attached a price list. The Court held: “Wesden contends that the attachment satisfies the quantity-term requirement because it shows that the parties agreed to an ‘”‘unlimited” quantity in writing, which is very specific.’ But this is not so. The attachment is an empty order form listing the per-unit price for each Auto Magic product. There is no quantity or exclusivity term in the price list.”

Wesdem LLC v. Illinois Tool Works, Inc., No. 22-50769 (June 9, 2023).

Jack Daniel’s v. VIP presented the question whether a dog toy, with the general appearance of a Jack Daniel’s bottle, infringed the Jack Daniel’s trademarks. The matter reached the Supreme Court because of a dispute over whether to (a) apply the customary likelihood-of-confusion factors under the Lanham Act, or (b) before applying those factors, apply “the Rogers test” that focuses on a First Amendent issue. The Supreme Court chose the simpler path and went straight to the factors:

Without deciding whether Rogers has merit in other contexts, we hold that it does not when an alleged infringer uses a trademark in the way the Lanham Act most cares about: as a designation of source for the infringer’s own goods. VIP used the marks derived from Jack Daniel’s in that way, so the infringement claim here rises or falls on likelihood of confusion. But that inquiry is not blind to the expressive aspect of the Bad Spaniels toy that the Ninth Circuit highlighted.

No. 22-148 (U.S. June 8, 2023) (citation omitted).

Longrunning litigation between the Allen Stanford receiver and a substantial Stanford investor came to an end in Janvey v. GMAG LLC, with the conclusion that the investor’s setoff defense had been forfeited.

The Fifth Circuit considered, but did not rule on, an argument based on the pretrial order. Reminding that “[a] pretrial order supersedes all pleadings,” the Fifth Circuit noted precedent that “even issues of law should be included in the pretrial order or else they are waived.” It was reluctant to apply that precedent here, however, when a joint stipulation said only that setoff would not be argued “during the trial of this matter.” The investor contended that setof was a legal matter that only became relevant after verdict.

But, held the Court, forfeiture occurred when the investor did not raise setoff in opposition to the receiver’s motion for entry of final judgment. No. 22-10235 (May 30, 2023).

Raskin v. Dallas ISD addresses whether a mother can sue, pro se, in federal court on behalf of her children under the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act. Acknowledging both the practical reality that many such actions must be brought pro se, and that the federal courts ordinarily require the professionalism of trained counsel, the majority opinion deftly read the relevant statutes to let the district court apply discretion to this issue on remand.

A dissent favored an absolute rule allowing such pro se proceedings, noting, inter alia, customs about pro se representation when the Judiciary Act was adopted in 1789. (to be fair, though, women such as Ms. Raskin did not have the ability to sue about much of anything in 1789, pro se or otherwise).

A recent Texas Lawbook article considers a new standing order by Hon. Brantley Starr about reliance on language-model AI programs when writing briefs. Judge Starr’s point is well-taken and Rule 11 should probably be revised to include a specific reference to this issue, given how pervasive these programs will likely become in the near future.

I asked ChatGPT what it thought about the matter (specifically: “What are the pros and cons of requiring attorneys to certify to the accuracy of court fiings made with the assistance of language-model AI programs, such as yourself?”) and here is what it had to say:

______

Introducing a requirement for attorneys to certify the accuracy of court filings made with the assistance of AI language models like GPT-4 could have several pros and cons. Here are some:

Pros:

  1. Responsibility and Accountability: Requiring certification ensures that attorneys review the generated content thoroughly before submitting it, increasing the reliability and accuracy of the information presented. It also maintains responsibility with the attorney, discourishing the misuse of AI and ensuring ethical conduct.
  2. Increased Accuracy: By requiring attorneys to certify accuracy, any incorrect or misleading information generated by AI can be corrected, minimizing the risk of procedural or factual errors that could potentially affect a case’s outcome.
  3. Improved Understanding: Since an attorney must certify the accuracy of the filing, they’re incentivized to understand the nuances of the AI-generated content better, making sure they can defend it in court.

Cons:

  1. Additional Burden: This requirement could add to the workload of attorneys, who are already often busy. While AI systems can increase efficiency, the certification process may negate some of this advantage.
  2. Potential Liability Issues: There might be concerns about the increased legal liability for attorneys. If an error from an AI system slips through, the attorney could be held responsible, which could lead to professional consequences or disciplinary actions.
  3. Complexity of AI Outputs: AI language models can generate vast amounts of complex content. While they can be extremely useful, it might be challenging for attorneys to verify all details accurately, especially given the complexity of the legal language and the high stakes involved.
  4. Possible Overreliance: There is a risk that attorneys might rely too heavily on AI-generated content and miss important aspects of a case that the AI, which lacks a deep understanding or context, may not catch. While certification could theoretically mitigate this, the added responsibility may be insufficient.

Ultimately, the success of such a certification requirement will depend on the balance between leveraging the benefits of AI assistance and ensuring the maintained quality, accuracy, and ethical use of legal filings. As AI evolves, it’s crucial to continually reassess such policies to ensure they meet the needs and challenges of the legal profession.

Literature is filled with nonexistent books, such as the “Necronomicon” in the works of H.P. Lovecraft, the “Treatise on the Binomial Theorem” written by Sherlock Holmes’s menace, Professor James Moriarty, etc.

To that collection, we can now add Varghese v. China South Airlines, Ltd., 925 F.3d 1339 (11th Cir. 2019).

ChatGPT helpfully offered that opinion to a New York lawyer researching a technical limitations issue. Unfortunately for that lawyer, the opinion did not actually exist and neither did any of the cases that it purported to cite. An understandably vexed federal judge is now considering sanctions about the matter.

Language-model AI tools are extraordinarily powerful and making advances every day. But they aren’t designed to do legal research, and anything they say about a specific precedent needs to be verified (and not by asking ChatGPT to verify itself, as happened in the federal case cited above).

In Ortiz v. Jordan, 562 U.S. 180 (2011), the Supreme Court “held that an order denying summary judgment on sufficiency of the evidence grounds is not apealable after a trial …. a party who wants to preserve a sufficiency challenge for appeal must raise it anew in a post-trial motion.”

In Dupree v. Younger, No. 22-210 (May 25, 2023): “The question presented in this case is whether this preservation requirement extends to a purely legal issue resolved at summary judgment. The answer is no.

That distinction makes sense and should help avoid unnecessary disputes about preservation. There will, however, be disputes about “sufficiency” questions that turn on points of law; as illustrated by the longstanding definition of a “no evidence” appeal issue in Texas state practice:

“No evidence” points must, and may only, be sustained when the record discloses one of the following situations: (a) a complete absence of evidence of a vital fact; (b) the court is barred by rules of law or of evidence from giving weight to the only evidence offered to prove a vital fact; (c) the evidence offered to prove a vital fact is no more than a mere scintilla; (d) the evidence establishes conclusively the opposite of the vital fact.

City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802 (Tex. 2005).

The complex trial-court system in Texas led to Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.065, which suspends limitations for 60 days after a dismissal for lack of jurisdiction. Simple enough, in theory. But in Sanders v. The Boeing Co., the Fifth Circuit showed the deceptive complexity of that statute when it certified these two issues about the statute to the Texas Supreme Court

1)     Does Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.064 apply to this lawsuit where Plaintiffs could have invoked the prior district court’s subject matter jurisdiction with proper pleading?

2)     Did Plaintiffs file this lawsuit within sixty days of when the prior judgment became “final” for purposes of Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.064(a)(2)?

(The second issue arose from the specific question “whether Texas law would deem dht flight attendants’ tolling savings-statute deadline as running from the time the district court entered judgment or the time [the Fifth Circuit] affirmed that judgment.”) No. 22-20317 (May 25, 2023).

The Fifth Circuit affirmed the certification of a class of GEICO car-insurance policyholders in Angell v. GEICO Adv. Ins. Co., holding, inter alia:

  • 3 ways to breach 1 contract = 1 injury. “GEICO’s failure to remit any of the three Purchasing Fees amounts to the same harm—a breach of the Policies. Whether GEICO is liable to Plaintiffs for any of the Purchasing Fees is dependent on an interpretation on the same language in the Policies and how the Policies to support the standing approach …. Although each of the Purchasing Fees may accrue differently, e.g., through the acquisition of a vehicle or upon the expiration of a vehicle’s registration, the complained injury stems from GEICO’s failed remittance, not the costs as assessed by the State.”
  • 1 injury = typicality. “The course of conduct here is virtually the
    same across the alleged deprivations of each Purchasing Fee, i.e., whether
    GEICO breached the Policies.”
  • 1 injury = predominance. “[T]he need for individual calculation here is relatively minor when compared to the common issues that predominate. And Plaintiffs articulate a reasonably ascertainable formula. Sales tax is equivalent to 6.25% of [Adjusted Vehicle Value], and Plaintiffs contend that it can be calculated for almost 97% of the class without resort to individualized review.”

No. 22-20093 (May 12, 2023) (all citations omitted).

It was a busy week for legislative privilege; after an opinion involving the latest dispute about the Jackson airport, the Fifth Circuit again ruled in favor of legislative-privilege claims in LULAC v. Hughes. The Court held that such matters were appropriately raised by interlocutory appeal, and on the merits observed:

“The privilege log shows that the legislators did not send privileged documents to third parties outside the legislative process; instead they brought third parties into the process. That decision did not waive the privilege. The very fact that Plaintiffs need discovery to access these documents shows that they have not been shared publicly. On the other hand, if the legislators had shared the documents publicly, then they could not rely on the privilege to prevent Plaintiffs from introducing those documents as evidence. But here, where the documents have been shared with some third parties—but haven’t been shared publicly—the waiver argument fails.”

No. 22-50435 (May 17, 2023) (emphasis in original).

Back during the pandemic, I got a copy of “Dallam’s Decisions.” It’s a one-volume work with the opinions of the short-lived Supreme Court of the  of Texas (1840-45, give or take). It’s fascinating stuff, some of that court’s work is terrible, and some is really insightful.

I wrote down some notes about how that court dealt with slavery, and recently turned those notes into a short article.

It just came out in the “Journal of the Texas Supreme Court Historical Society,” and you can read it starting at page 75 of this link. As you can see, I think those cases offer some good insights about our world, as well as that of the 1840s.

In response to an April 27 letter from Senator Charles Schumer expressing concern about case-assignment practices in the Northern District of Texas (which, while well-intentioned, also notably misspells “Abilene” as “Abeline”), Chief Judge David Godbey wrote back yesterday to defend the District’s practices: “In addition to the fair administration of justice, we must also consider: the number and type of civil and criminal cases filed in a division, which varies significantly from division to division; the convenience of the jurors, witnesses, parties, and attorneys; the desire of communities to have local judges; the burden of travel on court personnel; and the need to provide judicial support for divisions without a resident district judge.”

Complex litigation about the settlement of a patent dispute led to two straightforward jurisdictional holdings in National Oilwell Varco, LP v Auto-Dril, Inc.:

  1. Res judicata still applies. While “[p]arties may not waive the issue of subject matter jurisdiction,” it is also true that “[a] party that has had an opportunity to liitgate the question of subject-matter jurisdiction may not … reopen that question in a collateral attack upon an adverse judgment.” That principle disposed of an argument that, in the earlier case where the settlement was reached, the district court lacked jurisdiction because of problems with the underlying patent.
  2.  “‘Interpretation’ means — interpretation. In that earlier case, the district court’s order implementing the settlement said that it retained jurisdiction “in the event of a dispute concerning that agreement, to interpret and enforce the agreement, if necessary.” That langugage did not extend to subject-matter jurisdiction over a fraudulent-inducement claim, as that “is a tort claim falling outside the scope of the district court’s retained jurisdiction.”

No. 21-40648 (May 12, 2023).

Contentious litigation about the governance of the Jackson Municipal Airport again reached the Fifth Circuit in Jackson Municipal Airport Auth. v. Harkins, No. 21-60312 (May 10, 2023). The Court accepted jurisdiction in a document-production dispute for reasons unique to governmental privilege, but its waiver reasoning is instructive more broadly:

As relevant here, communications with third parties outside the legislature might still be within the sphere of “legitimate legislative activity” if the communication bears on potential legislation. Consequently, some communications with third parties, such as private communications with advocacy groups, are protected by legislative privilege when they are “a part and parcel of the modern legislative procedures through which legislators receive information possibly bearing on the legislation they are to consider.” Thus, we disagree with the district court’s broad pronouncement that the Legislators waived their legislative privilege for any documents or information that had been shared with third parties.

No 21-60312 (May 10, 2023) (citations omitted).

Among other issues presented by an unsuccessful attempt to relitigate an unsuccessful state-court takings claim in federal court, the Fifth Circuit reminded rhat the word “final” can have many meanings: “[A]lthough the rights of ‘all’ parties often need to be resolved before a judgment is ‘final’ for appeal, a ‘judgment may be final in a res judicata sense as to a part of an action although the litigation continues as to the rest.'” Tejas Motel LLC v. City of Mesquite, No. 22-10321 (March 22, 2023).

Despite skepticism in other opinions about vaccination programs in response to the COVID pandemic (especially when religious-liberty issues are in play), the Fifth Circuit reversed and rendered judgment for a prison doctor who administered an antipsychotic drug to a dangerous prisoner. The Court reasoned, inter alia: “[E]mergency  circumstances justify the abbreviation or elimination of pre-deprivation procedures like hearings.” Pinkston v. Kuiper, No. 21-60320 (May 4, 2023) (per curiam).

Owners of a yacht sued in Texas about an insurance-coverage issue. The Fifth Circuit affirmed the dismissal of the case because of a forum-selection clause requiring suit in England, noting;

  1. Standard. When the parties have a valid forum-selection clause, the general forum non conveniens factors are modified in two ways. “‘First, the plaintiff’s choice of forum merits no weight’ because, by contracting for a specific forum, ‘the plaintiff has effectively exercised its “venue privilege” before a dispute arises.'” And “[s]econd, the private-interest factors ‘weigh entirely in favor of the preselected forum’ ….” (citations omitted).
  2. Limitations? Plaintiffs were concerned about how an English court would apply the statute of limitations. But the case law says that “dismissal of a suit ‘when the plaintiff has violated a contractual obligation by filing suit other than the one specified in a valid forum-seleciton clause … works no injustice on the plaintiff.'” (citation omitted).

Noble House LLC v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London, No. 22-20281 (May 1, 2023).

Restaurant Law Center v. U.S. Dep’t of Labor presented an appeal from the denial of a preliminary injunction about a new minimum-wage rule. The dispute was the district court’s conclusion that the plaintiff did not establish irreparable injury.

The panel majority faulted the district judge for not considering Circuit precedent that “the nonrecoverable costs of complying with a putatively invalid regulation typically constitute irreparable harm.” The majority also observed that the face of the regulation imposed certain administrative requirements, and that “[s]tringently insisting on a precise dollar figure reflects an exactitude our law does not require.”

The dissent, emphasizing the standard of review, faulted the majority for “reasoning that because some employers will be harmed by the Rule’s wide net, Plaintiffs via their member restaurants will inevitably by caught in the seine” (an observation about standing that bears on a central question in the upcoming mifepristone argument).  No. 22-50145 (April 28, 2023).

Ganpat v. Eastern Pacific Shipping PTE presented a clash between international antisuit injunctions, and produced diametrically opposed opinions about those proceedings and the appropriate judicial response to them.

Majority and dissent agreed on this much:

  • Ganpat, an Indian citizen who served on a ship managed by Eastern Pacific, sued in New Orleans about a nasty case of malaria that he caught while serving.
  • Eastern Pacific then sued Ganpat in India, won an anti-suit injunction against the American case, and aggressively enforced that order against Ganpat, ultimately getting him jailed in India.
  • These events prompted the New Orleans federal court to issue an anti-suit injunction against Eastern Pacific proceeding further with the Indian case.

But from there, the opinions–both, considerably detailed–went in opposite directions in almost every way. The majority affirmed the injunction, calling the Indian proceedings  “bizarre” and saying that Eastern Pacific “evaded service,” while the dissent saw “the district court’s rulings as an attempt to compel domestic jurisdiction over a suit with highly tenuous domestic connections.”

The substantial divide between the opinions aptly frames the first sentence in the dissent’s footnote, referring to the Fifth Circuit having “take[n] a more permissive approach to foreign antisuit injunctions than many of our sister circuits: “This approach is probably wrong and should be reconsidered at an appropriate time.” No. 22-30168 (April 28, 2023) (Judge Ho (writing) and Wilson in the majority, Judge Jones dissenting).

United Natural Foods, Inc. v. NLRB, No.  a seemingly dry dispute about whether NLRB’s general counsel could withdraw an unfair labor practice complaint, produced a spirited clash between majority and dissent about how the “party presentation” principle applied to the arguments advanced in that case (see United States v. Sineneng-Smith, 140 S.Ct. 1575 (2020)). No. 21-60532 (April 24, 2023).

Despite that clash, all panel members agreed that simply throwing shade at Chevron was insufficient to present an issue for appellate review:

Turtle Island Foods (d/b/a Tofurky) makes plant-based food products, such as plant-based burgers, sausages, etc. It sued the Louisiana Agriculture Commissioner because of concerns about liability under that state’s Truth in Labeling of Food Products Act, which imposes civil penalties for “representing a food product as meat .. when the food product is not derived” from an animal.

The Fifth Circuit held as follows:

  1. Standing. Tofurky had standing. It did not have to “establish that it openly intends to violate the Act”; only that “its intended action–continuing with its ‘plant-based’ labels that use meat-esque words–is arguably proscribed.”
  2. Merits. Louisiana argued that by its terms, the law “applies only to ‘persons who intentionally misbrand or misrepresent” facts about a food product. In the context of a facial challenge, the Court was “required ‘to accept a narrowing construction of a state law in order to preserve its constitutionality.'”

With the issue so framed, the Court ruled for the state and reversed the trial court’s injunction against enforcement of the law. Turtle Island Foods v. Strain, No. 22-30236 (April 12, 2023) (citations omitted).

In review of a court-supervised sale of real property in a bankruptcy case, the Fifth Circuit provided a deft summary of how bankruptcy came to be an area of concern to the framers of the Constitution:

Federal bankruptcy provisions date to the Founding, embedded into our Constitution as a core tenet of the country’s economic vitality. And with good reason: “[d]ebt was an inescapable fact of life in early America . . . [that] cut across regional, class, and occupational lines,” and debtor’s prisons were antithetical to the new democratic ideal. So, in parallel with the industrialization and modernization of our markets, the Bankruptcy Code matured, its execution shifting to an independent court staffed by an array of able judges selected by merit and expert in the field, giving bankruptcy courts with their new status a crucial role in freeing the entrepreneurial energy indispensable to our nation’s economy.

SR Construction, Inc. v. Hall Palm Springs LLC, No. 21-11244 (April 17, 2023) (citations omitted).

After the Supreme Court’s stay ruling yesterday, a Fifth Circuit panel will proceed wth oral argument on May 17 in New Orleans. (Information about the audio livestream may be found in that link.)

While the Supreme Court’s order said very little, the votes of seven Justices were consistent with the position of Judge Haynes when the stay issue was before the Fifth Circuit, and no Justice indicated agreement with the analysis of the per curiam panel majority. (I recently observed in Slate that the “Dobbs-era Supreme Court is well aware of the judicial strand of conservative thought, as well as the political.”).

The plaintiffs in Spano v. Whole Foods, Inc. contended that a child with severe allergies was injured after eating a mislabeled cupcake. The district court dismissed the claims as preempted by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, and the Fifth Circuit reversed, stating that “[t]he question is whether Appellants have pled tort claims which have an independent state law basis,” and concluding that “[t]ey have”:

Each of their tort claims is ‘a recognized state tort claim’ rather than ‘a freestanding federal cause of action based on violation of the FDA’s regulations.’ Appellants ably lay out in their brief that each of their allegations is based in state law. In response, Whole Foods contends that “[e]very one of the … causes of action is specifically based on federally mandated allergen warnings under the FDCA.” While each of the causes of action does reference violations of FDA regulations, violations can only be, and only are, presented as evidence to “prove [Whole Foods’] breach of the state duty by showing that [Whole Foods] violated the FDA’s [food labeling] regulations.’ If, as the case develops, it becomes clear that there is no independent state duty upon which the Spanos can hang a particular claim, that claim will be preempted. On the pleadings, none appear to contain that fault.” 

No. 22-50593 (April 14, 2023) (citations omitted).

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