Thursday round-up

With the Court between oral argument sittings, yesterday’s coverage focused on several upcoming cases.

Greg Toppo of USA Today  interviews David Boies, one of the lead attorneys for the couples challenging California’s Proposition 8 in Hollingsworth v. Perry.  At Balkinization, Jack Balkin notes that “one of the strongest influences on the Justices, and especially Justice Kennedy, was how they believed their decisions would look in in ten or twenty year’s time,” and he suggests that the marriage cases illustrate a new modality of constitutional argument, based on how future generations will view an opinion.  Mark Sherman of The Associated Press discusses the Justices’ family backgrounds, observing that the “varied family portraits of the justices are somewhat at odds with the arguments of gay marriage opponents who stress the unique ability of heterosexual couples to have babies as a reason to uphold bans on same-sex marriage.” [Disclosure: Tejinder Singh of the law firm Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys work for or contribute to this blog in various capacities, was among the counsel on an amicus brief filed by international human rights advocates in support of the respondents in this case.]

At Patently-O, Brett M. Fischmann discusses Federal Trade Commission v. Actavis, in which the Justices will consider the legality of reverse payment agreements in patent litigation, and he argues that the Court should resolve “the apparent tensions between the Hatch-Waxman Act, the Patent Act, and the Sherman Act” by giving “substantial priority” to the Hatch-Waxman Act. [Disclosure: Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys work for or contribute to this blog in various capacities, also represented Louisiana Whole Sale Drug Company et al. as an amicus curiae in support of the petitioner in this case.] John Echeverria of the Center for Progressive Reform’s CPR blog discusses Horne v. Department of Agriculture, in which the Justices will consider which federal appellate court – the Federal Circuit or a nonspecialized regional one – should hear a Takings Clause challenge to a federal raisin price stabilization scheme. Meanwhile, at Crime and Consequences Kent Scheidegger argues that the NLRB’s plan to seek Supreme Court review of a decision by the D.C. Circuit limiting the President’s power to make recess appointments (covered in Conor’s round-up yesterday) might present “a case for summary affirmance.”

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Posted in: Round-up

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