

 
 Legal Sidebar 
 
Congressional Court Watcher: Recent 
Appellate Decisions of Interest to Lawmakers 
(June 24–June 30, 2024), Part 2 
July 1, 2024 
The federal courts issue hundreds of decisions every week in cases involving diverse legal disputes. This 
Sidebar series selects decisions from the past week that may be of particular interest to federal lawmakers, 
focusing on orders and decisions of the Supreme Court and precedential decisions of the courts of appeals 
for the thirteen federal circuits. Selected cases typically involve the interpretation or validity of federal 
statutes and regulations, or constitutional issues relevant to Congress’s lawmaking and oversight 
functions. 
Some cases identified in this Sidebar, or the legal questions they address, are examined in other CRS 
general distribution products. Members of Congress and congressional staff may click here to subscribe to 
the CRS Legal Update and receive regular notifications of new products and upcoming seminars by CRS 
attorneys. 
This week’s Congressional Court Watcher is divided into two parts because of the number of notable 
decisions issued over the past week. This Legal Sidebar (Part 2) addresses decisions of the U.S. courts of 
appeals from June 24 through June 30, 2024. A companion Legal Sidebar (Part 1) discusses Supreme 
Court activity from that period. 
Decisions of the U.S. Courts of Appeals 
Topic headings marked with an asterisk (*) indicate cases where the appellate court’s controlling opinion 
recognizes a split among the federal appellate courts on a key legal issue resolved in the opinion, 
contributing to a non-uniform application of the law among the circuits. 
•  Bankruptcy: The Fourth Circuit held that a probation-before-judgment disposition in 
state court constitutes a “conviction” resulting in restitution “included in a sentence” 
under 11 U.S.C. § 1328(a)(3) of the Bankruptcy Code, and a debtor’s restitution debt is 
therefore excluded from discharge. Once a debtor in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy completes 
their bankruptcy plan payments, all debts provided for in the plan are discharged, unless 
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CRS Legal Sidebar 
 
Prepared for Members and  
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the debts fall under an exception such as a debt “for restitution, or a criminal fine, 
included in a sentence on the debtor’s conviction of a crime.” The court observed that, 
while the Code does not define “conviction” or “sentence,” the Supreme Court’s 
reasoning in Dickerson v. New Banner Inst., Inc. and the Code’s legislative history 
suggest the terms should be interpreted broadly. The circuit panel affirmed the courts 
below, holding that the exception includes any determination of guilt in a trial or plea 
followed by a sentence of probation, even without the formal entry of a conviction and 
sentence (Feyijinmi v. Md. Cent. Collection Unit). 
•  Civil Rights: The Sixth Circuit affirmed the district court’s dismissal, on sovereign 
immunity grounds, of a state employee’s discrimination and retaliation claims brought 
under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). The court applied Supreme Court 
precedent in holding that sovereign immunity protects a state from ADA employment 
discrimination claims. The court also decided, as an issue of first impression, that states 
are entitled to immunity from ADA retaliation claims. Joining every circuit to have 
addressed the issue, the court held that, if Congress did not validly abrogate immunity for 
employment discrimination claims, it also did not abrogate immunity for employment-
related retaliation claims (Stanley v. Western Michigan University). 
•  *Civil Rights: A divided Ninth Circuit panel held that 42 U.S.C. § 1981 prohibits 
discrimination in hiring against United States citizens on the basis of their citizenship. 
The majority therefore reversed a district court’s dismissal of an employment 
discrimination action alleging that an employer discriminated against a naturalized citizen 
by preferring to hire noncitizen H-1B visa holders. The majority reasoned that the text of 
the statute requires that all persons within the jurisdiction of the United States “have the 
same right” to make contracts as “white citizens,” and, reading “the same” literally, an 
employer preferring some subset of noncitizens would impermissibly give those 
noncitizens a greater right to make contracts than citizens. The majority acknowledged 
that in so holding it disagreed with the Fifth Circuit (Rajaram v. Meta Platforms, Inc.). 
•  Consumer Protection: The Fourth Circuit held that notices issued by the Compliance 
Office of the Consumer Product Safety Commission do not constitute final agency action 
under the Administrative Procedure Act and thus are not subject to judicial review. The 
court held that the notices are not final because they only convey preliminary findings 
and warnings from agency staff and, under the agency’s current rules, only the 
Commission itself may make final determinations (Jake’s Fireworks Inc. v. U.S. 
Consumer Product Safety Comm’n). 
•  *Criminal Law & Procedure: The Third Circuit held that, where a person properly 
exhausts all challenges to the legality of a condition of supervised release, a district court 
may consider legality as a grounds for modification in a motion pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 
§ 3583(e)(2). The court acknowledged that the Second, Fifth, Sixth, and Ninth Circuits 
have found that illegality does not provide a proper ground for such a motion, while the 
Fourth and Seventh Circuits have permitted challenges based on legality under certain 
circumstances. The court concluded that sentencing judges who impose conditions of 
supervised release must be permitted to amend those conditions, balancing needs for 
finality and flexibility (United States v. D’Ambrosio). 
•  Criminal Law & Procedure: The Ninth Circuit rejected a defendant’s Commerce 
Clause challenge to a federal kidnapping conviction. The court held that the application 
of the federal kidnapping statute to an intrastate kidnapping is constitutional when the 
defendant uses a cellphone—an instrumentality of interstate commerce—in furtherance 
of the offense. The court reasoned that, according to the Supreme Court’s decision in 
  
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United States v. Lopez, Congress may regulate and protect instrumentalities of interstate 
commerce, even in intrastate activities (United States v. Stackhouse). 
•  Criminal Law & Procedure: The Tenth Circuit affirmed the district court’s revocation 
of a defendant’s supervised release after his term of supervised release had expired, 
notwithstanding the defendant’s argument that the delay in the revocation proceedings 
was not “reasonably necessary to the adjudication” as required by 18 U.S.C. § 3583(i). 
The panel attributed the delay to the state prosecution of the defendant for murder, which 
the panel said should proceed first for comity reasons and which may be relevant to the 
revocation determination. The court joined every other circuit that has considered 
whether the pendency of a state prosecution justifies a delay in revocation proceedings, 
holding that, at least when the state prosecution is for a serious charge, the delay is 
reasonably necessary under Section 3583(i) (United States v. Tyree-Peppers). 
•  Election Law: An Eleventh Circuit panel held that the public disclosure provision of the 
National Voter Registration Act requires a state to disclose lists of individuals who were 
either removed from the voter rolls because of a disqualifying felony or denied from 
registering to vote because of a disqualifying felony. The panel explained that records 
related to felony disqualification are records related to the implementation of “programs 
and activities” that promote the “accuracy and currency” of its voter lists under the Act 
and so are subject to disclosure. In a further, divided ruling, the majority of the panel held 
that the public disclosure provision does not require electronic production or regulate the 
fees a state may charge if it chooses to offer electronic production. The majority reasoned 
that the Act requires only availability for “public inspection” and certain “photocopying,” 
and determined that “public inspection” does not require electronic disclosure (Greater 
Birmingham Ministries v. Sec’y of State of Ala.). 
•  Environmental Law: A divided D.C. Circuit upheld a final rule issued in 2003 by the 
Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management (BLM) that withdrew a proposed 
rule that would have limited the maximum size of “mill sites” for mining claims on 
federal lands. Several conservation groups sued, claiming the rule violated the National 
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The 
court first concluded that BLM’s interpretation of Section 42 of the Mining Law of 1872, 
as amended, set out in the Final Rule was not unreasonable because the Mining Law does 
not contain a limit on the number of mill sites a claimant may locate, and the grammar, 
statutory history, and context of the statutory provision strengthen the force of BLM’s 
interpretation. The panel also concluded that NEPA’s requirement to prepare an 
environmental impact statement for “major Federal actions significantly affecting the 
quality of the human environment” did not apply to this rule because the withdrawal of 
the proposed rule merely maintains BLM’s long-standing practice regarding mill sites 
and the rule does not create any new environmental impacts. The panel also concluded 
that the final rule did not violate the APA because it was a logical outgrowth of the 
proposed rule, and therefore an additional cycle of notice and comment was not necessary 
(Earthworks v. Dep’t of the Interior). 
•  Environmental Law: The D.C. Circuit held in consolidated appeals that the 
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) did not violate federal notice-and-comment 
rulemaking requirements in a series of agency actions applying and enforcing regulations 
that govern the disposal of coal combustion residuals. The plaintiffs alleged that the EPA 
violated the Administrative Procedure Act and the Resource Conservation and Recovery 
Act by announcing in informal documents and actions what amounted to a new 
legislative rule that would require notice-and-comment rulemaking. The court held that 
the agency actions taken together did not create or amend a regulation or requirement, but 
  
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instead were implementing an existing 2015 rule and then applying it on a case-specific 
basis. Therefore, the court held that the actions did not amount to a reviewable legislative 
rule and that it lacked jurisdiction over the petitions (Electric Energy, Inc. v. EPA). 
•  Environmental Law: The Fourth Circuit concluded that persons or entities who arrange 
for the disposal of hazardous substances may be liable under the Comprehensive 
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) even if they had 
no knowledge that the disposed-of waste is hazardous. The court addressed the question 
whether the text of CERCLA—which imposes “arranger liability” based on a showing 
that a defendant “arranged for disposal . . . of hazardous substances”—requires an 
arranger to have both the intent to dispose of a substance and the specific intent to 
dispose of a hazardous substance, a question not previously decided by a federal appellate 
court. The court concluded that CERCLA does not require the arranger to intend to 
dispose of a hazardous substance. The court reasoned that Congress could have explicitly 
included a knowledge requirement as it did elsewhere in CERCLA, but did not do so 
(68th St. Site Work Grp. v. Alban Tractor Co). 
•  Environmental Law: In a citizen suit brought pursuant to the Endangered Species Act, 
the Ninth Circuit upheld a district court’s entry of a permanent injunction halting certain 
timber projects. The court held that the Act’s 60-day notice requirement for citizen suits is 
a claims-processing rule rather than a jurisdictional rule, abandoning long-standing 
circuit precedent due to recent Supreme Court case law addressing that distinction in 
other contexts. The Ninth Circuit further upheld the district court’s determination that the 
timber projects would result in a “take” of the listed species by harming the species’ 
breeding. The court held that the habitat being modified need not be “essential” for the 
species’ survival to conclude that its modification would injure and therefore result in a 
“take” of the species (Cascadia Wildlands v. Scott Timber Co.). 
•  Food & Drug: A divided Ninth Circuit held that the federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic 
Act (FD&C Act) does not preempt private enforcement of California’s state law analog, 
the Sherman Law, which incorporates all federal food labeling standards. Federal and 
state law prohibit nutrient content claims, or claims characterizing the level of a nutrient 
in a food, on baby food containers. Plaintiffs filed a class action alleging in part that a 
baby food product’s label violated the California law. The district court held that the 
plaintiffs’ state law claim was impliedly preempted because the Sherman Law is derived 
from the FD&C Act, and the FD&C Act grants the federal government exclusive 
enforcement authority in all but limited circumstances. The Ninth Circuit reversed, 
holding that the FD&C Act does not limit the manner in which an analog state statute is 
enforced. It distinguished the Supreme Court’s opinion in Buckman v. Plaintiff’s Legal 
Community, which held that state causes of action are impliedly preempted if they rest 
entirely on violations of the FD&C Act and do not involve any violation of duties owed 
under state law, on the basis that the Sherman Law imposes state food labeling 
requirements (Davidson v. Sprout Foods, Inc.). 
•  Immigration: The D.C. Circuit held, in four consolidated appeals, that the district courts 
lacked authority to order the Department of State to continue processing applications for 
diversity visas and issuing the visas after the statutory deadlines had passed. Section 
1153(c) of Title 8 established the diversity visa program, which allots immigrant visas—
through a lottery system—to aliens from countries with low levels of immigration to the 
United States. Under 8 U.S.C. § 1151(a)(3) and (e), there is a cap of 55,000 diversity 
visas per fiscal year. The Department of State administers the program by randomly 
selecting applicants from qualified countries to become eligible to receive immigrant 
visas, provided they meet a list of requirements and the statutory annual cap of 55,000 is 
  
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not exceeded. In 2020 and 2021, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the 
Department of State delayed the processing of these visas. The district courts determined 
that the delay was unlawful and ordered the Department to issue the visas to the lottery 
winners. The D.C. Circuit held that this remedy conflicts with the clear and 
constitutionally valid statute that caps the annual issuance of diversity visas at 55,000 
(Goodluck v. Biden). 
•  Intellectual Property: The Federal Circuit reversed a district court’s dismissal of Amarin 
Pharmaceuticals’ patent infringement lawsuit against Hikma Pharmaceuticals. The Food 
& Drug Administration (FDA) had previously approved Hikma’s generic version of 
Aramin’s brand-name drug Vascepa, but with a “skinny label” that covered only some 
uses of Vascepa. In particular, FDA’s approval covered only using Vascepa for treating 
severe hypertriglyceridemia, but not reducing cardiovascular risks—a use still covered by 
Amarin’s patents. The panel determined that Amarin plausibly alleged, at the pleading 
stage, that Hikma Pharmaceuticals’ “skinny label” and its press releases about its Vascepa 
generic could have induced infringement of Amarin’s patents by encouraging doctors and 
others to prescribe the drug for reducing for cardiovascular risks (the still-patented use) 
(Amarin v. Hikma). 
•  Labor & Employment: The Ninth Circuit joined several other circuits in holding that 
the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) does not require an employer to present 
contrary medical evidence before contesting a doctor’s certification of an employee’s 
serious health condition. An employee is entitled to FMLA leave if he has a serious health 
condition that makes the employee unable to perform the functions of the position, 
including an injury that involves continuing treatment by a health care provider and a 
period of incapacity for three or more consecutive days. An employer may require that an 
FMLA request for leave be supported by a certification from a health care provider. 
Further, the FMLA states that an employer “may require” additional medical opinions 
when it has reason to doubt the validity of the certification in 29 U.S.C. § 2613(c)(1). The 
court held that the “may” language is permissive in providing an employer an option to 
require another medical opinion and does not require the employer to do so before 
contesting the validity of a certification (Perez v. Barrick Goldstrike Mines, Inc.). 
•  Securities: The Fifth Circuit partially vacated the Securities and Exchange Commission’s 
(SEC’s) 2022 recission of a rule adopted in 2020 regulating proxy advisory firms. Notice-
and-awareness provisions in the rule would have required proxy advisory firms to 
provide notice and disclosure to a public company when the firm issued advice regarding 
the company to the firm’s clients, and to notify clients of responsive statements by the 
company. In both adopting and rescinding the rule, the SEC discussed concerns that these 
provisions created risks for the timeliness and independence of proxy advice. The Fifth 
Circuit held that the SEC failed both to reasonably explain its evaluation of these risks in 
2022 and to adequately justify why its evaluation of the risks changed between 2020 and 
2022. The court vacated the recission of the notice-and-awareness provisions while 
leaving other aspects of the recission in place, and remanded to the SEC (Nat’l Ass’n. of 
Mfrs. v. SEC). 
•  Spending: The Fifth Circuit held that a funding condition in the American Rescue Plan 
Act (ARPA) was unconstitutional and affirmed the district court’s injunction preventing 
the federal government from enforcing the condition. Through ARPA, Congress gave 
nearly $200 billion to the states to assist with economic recovery during the COVID-19 
pandemic on the condition that states agree not to use the funds to “directly or indirectly 
offset” reductions in state net tax revenue. The court first concluded that the states have 
standing to challenge the offset condition because they have suffered at least two injuries: 
  
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(1) having to choose between forgoing potentially billions of dollars in federal funding or 
losing their ability to set state tax policy and (2) the threat of a future federal recoupment 
proceeding requiring repayment of improperly used funds. The court then decided that 
the offset condition violated the Spending Clause because the phrase “directly or 
indirectly offset” was ambiguous. Any change to a state’s tax regime resulting in lower 
tax revenue, even if imposed for reasons unrelated to the funding, might lead the federal 
government to conclude that the state was using ARPA funds to “indirectly” offset the 
cut. The court also pointed to the statute’s failure to identify a baseline against which to 
measure revenue reductions as a source of ambiguity. The Fifth Circuit joined the 
Eleventh Circuit in holding that, if Congress chooses to impose spending conditions on 
the states, it has a constitutional obligation to do so unambiguously in the statute itself, 
and cannot rely on federal agencies to provide the requisite clarity (Texas v. Yellen). 
•  Tax: The Fourth Circuit affirmed the Tax Court’s interpretation of 26 U.S.C. § 45C(c)(2), 
which prohibits taxpayers from double-counting their expenses that simultaneously 
qualify for two different tax credits: (1) the “research credit,” which is intended to 
incentivize taxpayers to increase their investment in research year over year and (2) the 
“orphan drug credit,” which encourages pharmaceutical companies to develop “orphan 
drugs,” or drugs treating certain rare diseases. In a taxable year, a taxpayer may have 
“qualified clinical testing expenses” under the “orphan drug credit” which also are 
“qualified research expenses” under the “research credit.” The panel concluded that 26 
U.S.C. § 45C(c)(2) prohibits taxpayers from including expenses counted toward the 
orphan drug credit to also be counted toward the research credit for that taxable year, but 
expenses counted for “orphan drug credit” for prior years must be taken into account in 
determining base period research expenses for the purpose of applying the “research 
credit” (which credits increases in research investment) to subsequent tax years. The 
court reasoned that the plain meaning of “base period research expenses” in the statutory 
text compels this conclusion (United Therapeutics Corp. v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue). 
•  Tax: The Ninth Circuit held that the two-year limitations period for the government to 
sue to recover an erroneous tax refund under 26 U.S.C. § 7405 starts on the date the 
erroneous refund check clears the Federal Reserve and payment to the taxpayer is 
authorized by the Treasury, rather than the date on which the taxpayer received the check. 
The limitations period, set out in 26 U.S.C. § 6532(b), is triggered by the “making of 
such refund.” The court reasoned that a refund is “made” when it is paid, which is best 
reflected by the check-clearing date (United States v. Page). 
 
Author Information 
 
Jimmy Balser 
  Alexander H. Pepper 
Legislative Attorney 
Legislative Attorney 
 
 
Dorothy C. Kafka 
   
Legislative Attorney 
 
 
  
Congressional Research Service 
7 
 
 
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