Wednesday round-up

This morning the Supreme Court wraps up its January session with oral arguments in two cases. First on the agenda is a reargument in Knick v. Township of Scott, Pennsylvania, which asks whether the court should reconsider a precedent that requires property owners to exhaust state remedies before bringing federal takings claims under the Constitution. Miriam Seifter had this blog’s preview. Isaac Syed and Yuexin Angela Zhu preview the case for Cornell Law School’s Legal Information Institute. The second case today is Tennessee Wine & Spirits Retailers Association v. Blair, a challenge to Tennessee’s durational residency requirements for liquor licensing. Amy Howe had this blog’s preview, which first appeared at Howe on the Court. Cornell’s preview comes from Matt Farnum and Brady Plastaras.

Yesterday the justices issued two opinions. In New Prime Inc. v. Oliveira, the court held 8-0 that an exemption in the Federal Arbitration Act for transportation workers involved in interstate commerce applies to independent contractors. Ronald Mann analyzes the opinion for this blog. At The Employment Law Group, R. Scott Oswald writes that “[t]he court’s recent FAA jurisprudence may have revived the Gilded Age fiction that employment agreements are voluntary contracts — when, in truth, most workers have no option but to accept their terms — but Oliveira at least proves that the justices’ historical predilections may cut both ways[:] Here, a worker-friendly outcome was reached by entering the minds of 1920s legislators.” Another look at the opinion comes from Mark Joseph Stern at Slate.

In Stokeling v. United States, the justices ruled 5-4 yesterday that a state-law robbery conviction can qualify as a “violent felony” for the purposes of a sentencing enhancement under the Armed Career Criminal Act even when the conviction does not require the use of violent force. At Crime & Consequences, Kent Scheidegger writes that with this ruling, the Supreme Court “took a step back from the brink of irrationality in sentencing.”

This blog’s analysis of Monday’s argument in Thacker v. Tennessee Valley Authority, in which the court will decide whether an implied discretionary function exception bars a negligence claim against the TVA, comes from Gregory Sisk. Ronald Mann has this blog’s analysis of Monday’s argument in Rimini Street Inc. v. Oracle USA Inc. , in which the justices considered whether the term “full costs” awarded to a prevailing party in a copyright case is limited to taxable costs or also authorizes nontaxable costs.

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