Happy Tuesday! Welcome to the Supreme Court Brief! We've got coverage of Monday's oral arguments, including a warning from Justice Neil Gorsuch on attorney's use of rounding up billable hours. And the future of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could be in jeopardy after the high court granted cert in a dispute which found its funding scheme violated the U.S. Constitution. 

As always, thanks for reading and we welcome feedback and tips. You may contact Avalon Zoppo at [email protected]and follow her on Twitter @AvalonZoppo. You can find Brad Kutner at [email protected] and @bradkutner.

Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch. Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch, United States Supreme Court at the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Conference in San Francisco. Jason Doiy / ALM

Attorney Overbilling Concerns Emerge in Identity Theft Case

A U.S. Supreme Court justice equated the federal government's attempt to broaden an identity theft sentencing enhancement with attorneys rounding up billable hours in oral arguments Monday.

"If the federal government is correct and every time i order salmon I'm told it is fresh but it's frozen, and they run my credit card, that's identity left," Justice Neil Gorsuch said when grilling Stanford Law Professor Jeffrey Fisher during a hearing in the case, captioned Dubin v. United States