June 21, 2011 | The Legal Intelligencer
Securities Plaintiffs Win Two Out of Three at Supreme CourtThe U.S. Supreme Court issued three decisions in securities fraud cases this term. Plaintiffs' lawyers scored victories in the first two cases.
By Stephen A. Miller
9 minute read
September 30, 2011 | Texas Lawyer
As New Term Begins, Out With the Old, in With the NewBefore diving into the exciting cases awaiting decision at the Supreme Court in the coming year, it is worth pausing to examine a few interesting aspects of the court's work from the prior term.
By Stephen A. Miller
7 minute read
May 24, 2011 | The Legal Intelligencer
Global-Warming Litigation Gets Frosty Reception at the Supreme CourtIt is often difficult to predict the outcome of Supreme Court cases. This is not because the individual justices are particularly fickle or inscrutable. The reason is quite simple: The cases that make it all the way to the Supreme Court are hard.
By Stephen A. Miller
10 minute read
March 21, 2011 | The Legal Intelligencer
Justices Poised to Clarify Standards of Proof in Intellectual Property CasesThe Supreme Court's docket in recent years reflects the explosion in intellectual property litigation throughout the country. In the past five years, the court has decided more than double the number of IP cases that it decided in the previous five years.
By Stephen A. Miller
8 minute read
April 19, 2011 | The Legal Intelligencer
Confronting Changes in Confrontation Clause JurisprudenceIt is a little-known fact that statues of turtles rest at the bottom of several lampposts in the Supreme Court building. Architect Cass Gilbert's design of the building reportedly featured the turtle prominently because it symbolized the slow, deliberate pace of justice to be rendered by the court. For the most part, the analogy has held true.
By Stephen A. Miller
10 minute read
February 14, 2011 | The Legal Intelligencer
'Bad Vehicles' Could Cause Crash in Class ActionsIn U.S. Supreme Court parlance, a "bad vehicle" is a case whose factual or procedural posture exerts an adverse influence on the legal rule that the justices announce and apply.
By Stephen A. Miller
10 minute read
November 29, 2010 | The Legal Intelligencer
Three Supreme Court Cases to Test 'Presumption Against Pre-emption'Several political candidates won elections recently with calls to reinvigorate states' rights.
By Stephen A. Miller
10 minute read