All eyes will be on U.S. Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch on Monday at 10 a.m. when the justices take their seats on the bench.

Earl Warren famously tripped on his robe as he entered the court on his first day as chief justice in 1953. It was a borrowed, too-long robe—a problem that Gorsuch probably won't face, having worn his own robe as an appeals judge since 2006.

But Gorsuch will be closely watched again an hour or so later, when the court hears arguments in its second case, Town of Chester, New York v. Laroe Estates. That is when Neal Katyal of Hogan Lovells is scheduled to rise and argue on behalf of the town in the civil procedure case.