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You can see all paid petitions we're following below, organized by petitions relisted for the next conference, those scheduled for initial consideration at the next conference, other featured petitions, and finally, petitions in which the court has called for the views of the solicitor general.

View this list sorted by case name.

Petitions Relisted for the Next Conference (4)

Docket Case Page Issue(s)
24-435 GHP Management Corp. v. City of Los Angeles, California Whether an eviction moratorium depriving property owners of the fundamental right to exclude nonpaying tenants effects a physical taking under the Fifth Amendment.
24-728 Iowa Pork Producers Association v. Bonta (1) Whether a party alleging that California's Proposition 12 " which enacts a pork sales ban to regulate the manner in which pigs are housed in states across the country " discriminates against interstate commerce, both directly and under Pike v. Bruce Church, states a claim; and (2) whether lower federal courts evaluating fractured opinions from this court consider all justices' opinions to determine the majority position on a legal issue, or instead are limited to consider only opinions concurring in the result.
24-781 First Choice Women’s Resource Centers v. Platkin Whether, when the subject of a state investigatory demand has established a reasonably objective chill of its First Amendment rights, a federal court in a first-filed action is deprived of jurisdiction because those rights must be adjudicated in state court.
24-813 Chevron USA Inc. v. Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana (1) Whether a causal-nexus or contractual-direction test survives the 2011 amendment to the federal-officer removal statute, which provides federal jurisdiction over civil actions against "any person acting under [an] officer" of the United States "for or relating to any act under color of such office"; and (2) whether a federal contractor can remove to federal court when sued for oil-production activities undertaken to fulfill a federal oil-refinement contract.

Petitions We’re Watching for the Next Conference (3)

Docket Case Page Issue(s)
24-977 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corporation v. Albrecht Whether, if a pharmaceutical manufacturer fully informs the Food & Drug Administration of all material information bearing on a drug’s potential risk and seeks approval to warn of that risk on the label, but the FDA formally denies the request without mandating any alternative warning, the manufacturer may nonetheless be held liable under state law for failure to warn of that risk.
24-809 Goldey v. Fields (1) Whether an implied cause of action exists for Eighth Amendment excessive-force claims; and (2) whether the court should reconsider the premise that the judiciary may imply causes of action for damages under the federal Constitution that Congress did not enact.
23-1197 Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections and Public Safety Whether an individual may sue a government official in his individual capacity for damages for violations of the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000. CVSG: 5/7/2025

Featured Petitions (50)

Docket Case Page Issue(s)
24-1145 Live Nation Entm't v. Heckman (1) Whether the Federal Arbitration Act protects all arbitration agreements or only a subset of traditional, bilateral arbitration agreements that the act’s drafters specifically envisioned; and (2) whether the FAA preempts California’s severability doctrine because it specifically targets and disproportionately invalidates arbitration agreements.
24-1113 New Jersey Transit Corporation v. Colt (1) Whether a state’s formal financial liability for a judgment against a state-created entity carries more weight in assessing whether that entity is an arm of the state than other factors, including the state’s own characterization of that entity; and (2) whether New Jersey Transit is an arm of the state of New Jersey for interstate sovereign immunity purposes.
24-1107 Peoples v. Cook County, Illinois Whether the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution provides the sort of explicit textual source of constitutional protection for overdetention such that the Eighth Amendment, not substantive due process, must be the exclusive guide for analyzing claims of unconstitutional overdetention.
24-1099 Smith v. Scott (1) Whether, viewing the facts from the officers’ perspective at the time, the officers acted reasonably under the Fourth Amendment by using bodyweight pressure to restrain a potentially armed and actively resisting individual only until handcuffing could be accomplished; and (2) whether the panel erred in denying qualified immunity where no case clearly established that pre-handcuffing bodyweight pressure violates the Fourth Amendment.
24-1093 Mumford v. Iowa Whether a dog sniff of the interior of a lawfully stopped vehicle violates the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution absent consent to the sniff or probable cause to believe that the vehicle contains illegal drugs.
24-1092 Mungo Homes, LLC v. Huskins Whether the South Carolina Supreme Court erred in applying a severability rule that disfavors arbitration and by creating a state-specific public policy defense to arbitration that conflicts with the Federal Arbitration Act, such that enforcement of arbitration agreements in the state now turns on whether enforcement is sought in state or federal court.
24-1084 Hohn v. U.S. Whether a prosecutor’s intentional, unjustified intrusion into a defendant’s attorney-client communications violates the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution without a showing of discrete, trial-specific prejudice.
24-1078 Beck v. U.S. (1) Whether Feres v. United States’s bar against a servicemember’s ability to bring tort claims “incident to service” is only triggered when the injury was directly caused by the servicemember’s military duties or orders; and whether the court should limit or overrule Feres because its limitation on servicemembers has no basis in the Federal Tort Claims Act's text and is unworkable.
24-1073 Maxwell v. U.S. Whether, under Santobello v. New York and common principles of contract interpretation, promise on behalf of the “United States” or the “Government” that is made by a U.S. Attorney in one district binds federal prosecutors in other districts.
24-1068 Monsanto Company v. Durnell Whether the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act preempts a state-law failure-to-warn claim when the Environmental Protection Agency has repeatedly concluded that the warning is not required and the warning cannot be added to a product without EPA approval.
24-1063 Hunter v. U.S. (1) Whether the only permissible exceptions to a general appeal waiver are for claims of ineffective assistance of counsel or that the sentence exceeds the statutory maximum; and (2) whether an appeal waiver applies when the sentencing judge advises the defendant that he has a right to appeal and the government does not object.
24-1061 Project Veritas v. Vasquez (1) Whether the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit erred by holding that Oregon’s prohibition of unannounced recordings—which expressly exempts recordings of police activity and discussions during certain felonies—is content-neutral and thus subject only to intermediate scrutiny; and (2) whether, even if Oregon’s law is content-neutral, it fails intermediate scrutiny because it restricts unannounced audio recording in wholly public settings where privacy interests are minimal or nonexistent.
24-1034 Sneed v. Raybon Whether the court of appeals erred in denying petitioner’s application for a certificate of appealability (COA) as to his constitutional habeas claims, where (i) a circuit judge found that the COA standard had been met, and (ii) the court denied a COA based on its ruling on the merits of those claims.
24-1025 Crowe v. State Bar of Oregon (1) Whether compelled membership in a bar association that engages in nongermane activities is necessarily unconstitutional; and (2) whether the court should reconsider Keller v. State Bar of California in light of Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 31, and require the activities of a mandatory bar association to satisfy at least exacting scrutiny.
24-1021 Galette v. New Jersey Transit Corporation Whether the New Jersey Transit Corporation is entitled to interstate sovereign immunity under the federal Constitution.
24-1020 Uber Technologies v. Draameh Whether, under Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, a federal court must apply existing state law or can instead predict changes in state law.
24-1015 Does 1-2 v. Hochul (1) Whether compliance with state laws directly contrary to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964’s requirement to provide a reasonable accommodation for religious beliefs may serve as an undue hardship justifying an employer’s noncompliance with Title VII; and (2) whether a state law that requires employers to deny without any consideration all requests by employees for a religious accommodation, contrary to Title VII’s religious nondiscrimination provision, is preempted by Title VII and the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution.
24-1001 Cotter Corporation v. Mazzocchio Whether federal nuclear safety regulations preempt state tort standards of care in public liability actions.
24-994 National Basketball Association v. Salazar (1) Whether a consumer claiming that he was harmed by disclosure of his personal information must plead that his information was revealed to the public to establish standing under Article III of the Constitution, or instead the consumer need only plead that his information was disclosed to any third party without his consent; and (2) whether the Video Privacy Protection Act bars a business from disclosing information about consumers who do not subscribe to its audiovisual goods or services.
24-993 Olivier v. City of Brandon, Mississippi (1) Whether this court’s decision in Heck v. Humphrey bars claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 seeking purely prospective relief where the plaintiff has been punished before under the law challenged as unconstitutional; and (2) whether Heck v. Humphrey bars Section 1983 claims by plaintiffs even where they never had access to federal habeas relief.
24-992 Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority v. Good (1) Whether a state treasury’s liability for an entity’s judgments is the most important factor in determining whether that entity is an arm of the state; and (2) whether incidents of corporate status, such as the capacity to sue and be sued, own property, and contract, are relevant to determining whether a public corporation established by a state for a state-wide public purpose and governed by a board comprising state officials and individuals appointed by the governor and confirmed by the legislature is an arm of the state.
24-977 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corporation v. Albrecht Whether, if a pharmaceutical manufacturer fully informs the Food & Drug Administration of all material information bearing on a drug’s potential risk and seeks approval to warn of that risk on the label, but the FDA formally denies the request without mandating any alternative warning, the manufacturer may nonetheless be held liable under state law for failure to warn of that risk.
24-972 Bell v. U.S. (1) Whether a misrepresentation that does not concern the price or fundamental characteristics of property can give rise to a violation of the federal mail-fraud and wire-fraud statutes, 18 U.S.C. § 1341 and 18 U.S.C. § 1343; and (2) whether a defendant may be convicted for making a false statement under 18 U.S.C. § 1001 by answering a question posed by a government agent in a way that is ambiguous as to its truth or falsity.
24-969 Community Financial Services Association of America, Limited v. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Whether, in order to obtain judicial relief, a party challenging governmental action taken by an individual who remained in office against the president’s wishes due to an unconstitutional removal restriction must show that a hypothetical replacement officer would have taken a different action.
24-968 Moore v. U.S. Whether courts should analyze as-applied Second Amendment challenges to 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) by examining whether historical tradition supports permanently disarming someone for the predicate offense(s) underlying the defendant’s conviction.
24-964 O’Bannon v. King (1) Whether private parties may seek judicial enforcement of the Readmission Acts, statutes that imposed restrictions on former Confederate states as conditions of regaining representation in Congress; and (2) whether plaintiffs may invoke Ex parte Young to bypass a state’s sovereign immunity when they lack a cause of action.
24-959 Jordan v. Mississippi (1) Whether the Mississippi Supreme Court, in conflict with this court’s decisions in Ake v. Oklahoma and McWilliams v. Dunn (but consistent with that court’s prior decisions refusing to enforce Ake according to its terms), denied petitioner due process by refusing to provide expert mental health assistance sufficiently independent of the prosecution and available to the defense to assist him in developing and presenting his sentencing mitigation case, and in rebutting the state’s case against him; and (2) whether the Mississippi Supreme Court, in conflict with this court’s decision in Cruz v. Arizona and in disregard of the supremacy of federal law, departed from its longstanding interpretation of the intervening-law exception to the state’s bar on successive habeas petitions to deny petitioner the benefit of this court’s clarification of Ake in McWilliams.
24-952 South Point Energy Center LLC v. Arizona Department of Revenue (1) Whether 25 U.S.C. § 5108 expressly preempts state and local taxation of permanent improvements on trust land when the improvement’s owner is a non-Indian; and (2) whether federal law impliedly preempts state and local taxation of petitioner’s permanent improvement.
24-938 American Airlines Group Inc. v. U.S. (1) Whether, absent evidence of a marketwide price increase or output reduction, a reduction in competition between two members to a joint venture is sufficient to prove a substantial anticompetitive effect at step one of antitrust law's rule of reason; and (2) whether, to meet its burden at step two of the rule of reason, a defendant must disprove other potential causes for the asserted procompetitive benefits and prove that the asserted procompetitive benefits were not offset by out-of-market anticompetitive effects.
24-935 Flower Foods v. Brock Whether workers who deliver locally goods that travel in interstate commerce — but who do not transport the goods across borders nor interact with vehicles that cross borders — are “transportation workers” “engaged in foreign or interstate commerce” for purposes of the exemption in Section 1 of the Federal Arbitration Act.
24-905 Bronitsky v. Saldana Whether, under the Bankruptcy Code, debtors can voluntarily contribute to their own retirement accounts rather than pay back unsecured creditors — and if so, when (and in what amount) such contributions might be permissible.
24-809 Goldey v. Fields (1) Whether an implied cause of action exists for Eighth Amendment excessive-force claims; and (2) whether the court should reconsider the premise that the judiciary may imply causes of action for damages under the federal Constitution that Congress did not enact.
24-805 Maldonado-Magno v. Bondi Whether the U.S. courts of appeals should review de novo or for substantial evidence the agency's determination that a given set of facts do not show "persecution or well-founded fear of persecution on account of" a protected characteristic under 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A).
24-796 Missouri v. U.S. (1) Whether federal courts can second-guess a state"s "reason" for exercising 10th Amendment authority; (2) whether the federal Constitution prohibits states from exercising 10th Amendment authority when motivated by a concern that a federal statute is unconstitutional; and (3) whether a state official is a proper defendant under Ex parte Young simply because the official is regulated by a statute, or instead the official also needs to possess authority to enforce the challenged law.
24-783 Enbridge Energy, LP v. Nessel Whether district courts have the authority to excuse the thirty-day procedural time limit for removal in 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b)(1).
24-777 Urias-Orellana v. Bondi Whether a federal court of appeals must defer to the Board of Immigration Appeals"s judgment that a given set of undisputed facts does not demonstrate mistreatment severe enough to constitute "persecution" under 8 U.S.C. " 1101(a)(42).
24-745 Montana v. Planned Parenthood of Montana Whether a parent’s fundamental right to direct the care and custody of his or her children includes a right to know and participate in decisions concerning their minor child’s medical care, including a minor’s decision to seek an abortion.
24-621 National Republican Senatorial Committee v. Federal Election Commission Whether the limits on coordinated party expenditures in 52 U.S.C. § 30116 violate the First Amendment, either on their face or as applied to party spending in connection with "party coordinated communications" as defined in 11 C.F.R. " 109.37.
24-594 Seale v. U.S. Whether the certificate of appealability requirement in 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c) bars a court of appeals from exercising jurisdiction over a person's appeal from a district court's refusal to conduct a full resentencing after one of their convictions was vacated on constitutional grounds.
24-549 Grant v. Zorn (1) Whether the False Claims Act"s statutory civil penalty must be limited to a single-digit multiplier of the actual damages under the Eighth Amendment, in a non-intervened qui tam action; and (2) whether the Act's prohibition on presenting "false or fraudulent" claims to the government for payment provides two distinct manners of establishing liability, such that a finding of fraudulent claim submissions obviates a finding of falsity.
24-532 Federal Republic of Nigeria v. Zhongshan Fucheng Industrial Investment Co. (1) Whether, for interpreting the intentions of treaty parties regarding a word like "person," extra-textual information such as historical context and contemporary domestic law is a material input in parallel with the textual analysis; and (2) whether the New York Convention applies for arbitration agreements governing a dispute with a sovereign nation arising out of its role as a sovereign.
24-350 Port of Tacoma v. Puget Soundkeeper Alliance Whether Section 505 of the Clean Water Act authorizes citizens to invoke the federal courts to enforce conditions of state-issued pollutant-discharge permits adopted under state law that mandate a greater scope of coverage than required by the act. CVSG: 5/27/2025
24-345 FS Credit Opportunities Corp. v. Saba Capital Master Fund, Ltd. Whether Section 47(b) of the Investment Company Act creates an implied private right of action. CVSG: 5/22/2025
24-277 Borochov v. Islamic Republic of Iran Whether the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act"s terrorism exception extends jurisdiction to claims arising from a foreign state"s material support for a terrorist attack that injures or disables, but does not kill, its victims. CVSG: 5/27/2025
24-181 Sony Music Entm't v. Cox Communications Whether the profit requirement of vicarious copyright infringement permits liability when the defendant expects commercial gain from the enterprise in which infringement occurs, or instead permits liability only when the defendant expects commercial gain from the act of infringement itself. CVSG: 5/27/2025
24-171 Cox Communications v. Sony Music Entm't (1) Whether the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit erred in holding that a service provider can be held liable for "materially contributing" to copyright infringement merely because it knew that people were using certain accounts to infringe and did not terminate access, without proof that the service provider affirmatively fostered infringement or otherwise intended to promote it; and (2) whether the 4th Circuit erred in holding that mere knowledge of another"s direct infringement suffices to find willfulness under 17 U.S.C. § 504(c). CVSG: 5/27/2025
23-1360 Fiehler v. Mecklenburg Whether a court has the power to disregard evidence of the location of a water boundary from a federal survey based on subsequent evidence of the body of water's location. CVSG: 5/27/2025
23-1213 Mulready v. Pharmaceutical Care Management Association (1) Whether the Employee Retirement Income Security Act preempts state laws that regulate pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) by preventing them from cutting off rural patients" access, steering patients to PBM-favored pharmacies, excluding pharmacies willing to accept their terms from preferred networks, and overriding state discipline of pharmacists; and (2) whether Medicare Part D preempts state laws that limit the conditions PBMs may place on pharmacies" participation in their preferred networks. CVSG: 5/27/2025
23-1209 M & K Employee Solutions, LLC v. Trustees of the IAM National Pension Fund Whether the Employee Retirement Income Security Act's instruction to compute withdrawal liability "as of the end of the plan year" requires a multiemployer pension plan to base the computation on the actuarial assumptions to which its actuary subscribed at the end of the year, or allows the plan to use different actuarial assumptions that were adopted after the end of the year. CVSG: 5/27/2025
23-1197 Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections and Public Safety Whether an individual may sue a government official in his individual capacity for damages for violations of the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000. CVSG: 5/7/2025

Calls for the Views of the Solicitor General (6)

Docket Case Page Issue(s)
24-1062 The Hertz Corporation v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. Whether an unwritten pre-Code exception overrides the Bankruptcy Code’s express statutory text and allows creditors in solvent-debtor cases to recover amounts that the Code explicitly disallows.
24-917 Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC v. NTE Carolinas II, LLC Whether a plaintiff can prevail on a monopolization claim under Section 2 of the Sherman Act by aggregating multiple distinct, independently lawful acts into an unlawful whole.
24-909 Agudas Chasidei Chabad of U.S. v. Russian Federation Whether a “foreign state” lacks immunity from U.S. jurisdiction under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act if either U.S.-nexus test in 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(3) is met, or instead a “foreign state” loses its immunity only if the first U.S.-nexus test is met—i.e., if the expropriated property, or property exchanged for it, is found in the United States.
24-856 Cisco Systems v. Doe I (1) Whether the Alien Tort Statute allows a judicially-implied private right of action for aiding and abetting; (2) whether, if ATS aiding-and-abetting claims are cognizable, mere knowledge rather than purpose suffices to show the requisite mens rea; and (3) whether the Torture Victim Protection Act allows a judicially-implied private right of action for aiding and abetting.
24-699 Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Corporación Cimex, S.A. Whether the Helms-Burton Act abrogates foreign sovereign immunity in cases against Cuban instrumentalities, or whether parties proceeding under that act must also satisfy an exception under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act.
24-620 Pizarro v. The Home Depot Whether, consistent with trust law, burden-shifting applies to the element of causation under 29 U.S.C. § 1109(a).