Friday round-up

At the National Conference of State Legislatures Blog, Lisa Soronen discusses Town of Chester v. Laroe Estates, Inc., in which the justices ruled this week that an as-of-right intervenor must have standing if it is seeking relief not requested by a plaintiff in the case, noting that the “court didn’t address the issue of whether intervenors must possess standing to intervene as a matter of right if they seek the same relief as the plaintiff.” At Stanford Law School’s Legal Aggregate blog, Shirin Sinnar explains that the decision “may make it harder for parties that aren’t originally part of a lawsuit to participate in litigation, for better or for worse,” noting that such participation “often occurs in public law contexts, where the outcome of the case may affect a lot of people beyond the original parties.”

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