Legal Sidebari 
 
Congressional Court Watcher: Recent 
Appellate Decisions of Interest to Lawmakers 
(August 1–August 7, 2022) 
August 8, 2022 
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 t
he Supreme Court and precedential decisions of the courts of appeals 
for t
he 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 
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Decisions of the Supreme Court 
No Supreme Court opinions or grants of certiorari were issued this week. The Supreme Court’s next term 
begins October 3, 2022. 
Decisions of the U.S. Courts of Appeals 
Topic headings marked with an asterisk (*) indicate cases in which 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. 
  
Arbitration: The Ninth Circuit became t
he latest circuit court to interpret broadly the 
jurisdictional provision of
 Section 203 of the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA). The court 
ruled that petitions to enforce arbitral summonses are proceedings “falling under” the 
New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, 
even if such proceedings are not explicitly listed in the Convention. The court found 
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https://crsreports.congress.gov 
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support for its decision in dictionary definitions of “falling under” at the time Congress 
enacted Section 203, as well as the structure and purpose of both the Convention and the 
FAA
 (Jones Day v. Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, LLP). 
  
Bankruptcy: The Ninth Circuit held that a disbarred attorney-debtor’s obligation to 
reimburse the California State Bar for payments made by the Client Security Fund to his 
wronged clients was not dischargeable under
 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(7). The court reasoned 
that § 523(a)(7) provides for the discharge of fines, penalties, or forfeitures payable to 
and for the benefit of a governmental unit; the section does not permit discharge where a 
debt constitutes compensation for actual pecuniary costs. Under California law, the court 
further reasoned, the purpose of the Client Security Fund is to relieve or mitigate 
pecuniary losses caused by attorneys; an attorney must reimburse the fund for moneys 
paid out; and the state bar has a right of subrogation, meaning that it steps into the shoes 
of the aggrieved party
 (Kassas v. State Bar of California). 
  
Civil Procedure: In a “mass action” case brought by more than 400 pharmacies against a 
pharmaceutical benefits company under state law, the Third Circuit found the federal 
district court had jurisdiction and remanded the case for further proceedings. Class action 
lawsuits alleging violations of state law generally must be brought first in state court, 
though such suits may be removable to federal district court if certain criteria are met. 
The Third Circuit considered whether the
 Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 (CAFA) has 
an exception for mass actions, allowing them to be initially filed in federal district court. 
The Third Circuit agreed with other circuit courts that criticized CAFA as opaquely 
drafted, particularly in the statute’s use of internal cross-references. Still, it held that the 
best reading of CAFA gave federal district courts original jurisdiction over mass actions 
that have characteristics set forth i
n 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2)–(10), which describe class 
actions removable to federal court. In the present case, the circuit court ruled that the 
factors set forth in § 1332(d)(2)–(10) had been satisfied and that the federal district court 
could permit discovery regarding an issue in dispute 
(Robert D. Mabe, Inc. v. OptumRx). 
  
*Civil Rights: A Fifth Circuit panel affirmed a district court’s dismissal of employees’ 
challenge to a gender-based scheduling policy, reluctantly concluding the employees 
failed to state a viable claim
 under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. The panel said it was 
bound by circuit precedent requiring that employees allege an adverse employment 
action, which had not happened here. The panel suggested that this precedent was not the 
best reading of Title VII, and noted that it conflicted with other circuits that recognized 
Title VII claims challenging discrimination in the terms and conditions of employment, 
including shift assignments. Still, the panel ruled it was bound by circuit precedent until it 
is superseded by statute or overruled by either the en banc Fifth Circuit or the Supreme 
Court 
(Hamilton v. Dallas Cnty.). 
  
Consumer Protection: The D.C. Circuit ruled that the Consumer Product Safety 
Commission (CPSC) had statutory authority to issue a final rule setting mandatory safety 
standards for all infant sleep products, including those that had been unregulated under 
Section 104(b) of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act. The court held the Act 
authorized the CPSC to extend a safety standard to previously unregulated products 
(Finbinn, LLC v. Consumer Product Safety Comm’n). 
  
Criminal Law & Procedure: The Second Circuit allowed a petitioner’s extradition to 
South Korea to proceed after he invoked the extradition treaty’s “lapse of time” 
provision, which permits extradition to be denied where the statute of limitations in the 
requested state had run. The court joined other circuits in ruling that lapse of time 
provisions in extradition treaties set forth a discretionary factor for the Secretary of State 
  
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to consider in deciding whether to extradite, not a mandatory determination for a court to 
make before certifying extradition 
(Yoo v. United States). 
  
Criminal Law & Procedure: Joining other circuits, the Seventh Circuit rejected a 
Commerce Clause challenge to a criminal conviction under t
he federal arson statute, 18 
U.S.C. § 844(i). Applying the Supreme Court’s four-factor framework from
 United States 
v. Morrison, the court ruled that the arson statute falls within Congress’s authority to 
regulate interstate commerce
 (United States v. Johnson). 
  
Criminal Law & Procedure: In a divided opinion, the D.C. Circuit reversed a district 
court holding that a member of the Fleet Marine Corps Reserve was not subject to court-
martial jurisdiction. The court held that Congress’
s statutory grant of military jurisdiction 
over Fleet Marine Reservists comports with the Constitution’
s Make Rules Clause 
because those reservists have a formal relationship with the armed forces that includes a 
duty to obey military orders. The court further ruled that the Fifth Amendment’s Grand 
Jury Clause did not separately bar the court-martial because that Clause contai
ns an 
exception for cases arising in the land or naval forces, which is coextensive with the 
Make Rules Clause 
(Larrabee v. Del Toro). 
  
Education: The Eleventh Circuit held that it lacked appellate jurisdiction over a federal 
district court’s remand of a
n Individuals with Disabilities Education Act claim to a state 
administrative agency because the remand order was not a “final” decision appealable 
under
 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (S.S. v. Cobb Cnty. Sch. Dist.). 
  
Election Law: The Seventh Circuit ruled that a county election board did not violate a 
political candidate’s First or Fourteenth Amendment rights when it struck his name from 
a Republican primary ballot following a county Republican Party’s challenge to his 
candidacy. The court reasoned that political parties have First Amendment interests of 
association that would be infringed upon by including an unwanted person in the group 
(Hero v. Lake Cnty. Election Bd.). 
  
*Environmental Law: A divided Seventh Circuit reversed a district court’s decision to 
deny attorney’s fees and costs under the Endangered Species Act’s citizen suit provision, 
16 U.S.C. § 1540(g). The provision allows a court to award fees and costs when 
“appropriate.” The Seventh Circuit ruled that reasonable fees are presumptively 
appropriate when a citizen-litigant has some success under the Act, unless special 
circumstances make the award unjust. In doing so, the court disagreed with the Eighth 
Circuit in ruling that a losing party’s lack of resources is not a special circumstance 
(Animal Legal Defense Fund v. Special Memories Zoo). 
  
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA): The Second Circuit upheld a district court’s 
ruling that the Food & Drug Administration properly withheld certain information from a 
FOIA requestor regarding its approval of a pharmaceutical corporation’s application for 
accelerated drug approval. The court concluded that the information was lawfully 
withheld under
 FOIA Exemption 4 and th
e FOIA Improvement Act of 2016, which 
requires an agency to withhold records if it “reasonably foresees that disclosure would 
harm an interest protected by” a FOIA Exemption. The court held that FOIA Exemption 
4, which generally covers “trade secrets and commercial or financial information 
obtained from a person and privileged or confidential,” protects the submitter’s 
commercial or financial interests in information of a type held in confidence and not 
disclosed to any member of the public by the person to whom it belongs. The panel held 
that the denial of plaintiff’s FOIA request was warranted because the information fell 
under FOIA Exemption 4 and its release would foreseeably harm the pharmaceutical 
corporation’s commercial interests 
(Seife v. Food & Drug Admin.). 
  
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Health: The Ninth Circuit upheld sequestration as an appropriate method to determine 
limits on Medicare spending for hospice care. The court addressed intertwining statutory 
limits on Medicare spending for hospice care: (1) Medicare’s annual limit on the total 
amount the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) may reimburse hospices; 
and (2)
 the Budget Control Act (BCA), which separately requires the government to 
make comprehensive cuts, also known as sequestration, to direct spending programs 
when certain statutory conditions are met. Multiple hospices challenged CMS’s 
sequestration method under the statutes. The Ninth Circuit decision ruling that CMS 
acted in accordance with the text of the Medicare statute and the BCA aligns with a ruling 
by the D.C. Circuit
 earlier this year (Silverado Hospice, Inc. v. Becerra). 
  
*Immigration: The Eleventh Circuit affirmed a Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) 
decision holding that the petitioner was removable because he was convicted of a “crime 
of child abuse, child neglect, or child abandonment” under
 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(E)(i). 
The court added to a circuit split over the BIA’s interpretation of that statute, deeming the 
interpretation reasonable and entitled to deference. The BIA interpreted the statute to 
cover criminally negligent conduct with no resulting physical injury, so long as there was 
a reasonable probability of harm
 (Bastias v. Attorney Gen.). 
  
Intellectual Property: The Federal Circuit held, after concluding that t
he definition of 
“inventor” in the Patent Act unambiguously refers to natural persons, that an artificial 
intelligence software system cannot be listed as the inventor on a patent application 
(Thaler v. Vidal). 
  
Labor & Employment: The D.C. Circuit set aside guidance from the Federal Labor 
Relations Authority (FLRA) interpreting two provisions of t
he Federal Service Labor-
Management Relations Statute. The guidance provided that agency heads could review a 
collective bargaining agreement (CBA) extended under a continuance clause and enforce 
regulations that conflicted with the CBA and became effective after the agreement’s 
original effective date. Applying t
he Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense 
Council framework, the court found no statutory basis for either part of the FLRA 
guidance. The court reasoned that invoking a continuance clause does not execute a new 
agreement, so there is no basis for a second round of agency-head review, and agencies 
may not enforce subsequently enacted regulations that conflict with an agreement that 
remains in effect
 (Nat’l Treasury Employees Union v. FLRA). 
  
*Securities: The Second Circuit added to a circuit split over the elements of
 18 U.S.C. 
§ 1514A, which bars publicly traded companies from taking adverse employment actions 
against workers “because of” lawful whistleblowing acts. Courts have disagreed on 
whether § 1514A requires plaintiffs to show that the adverse employment action was 
motivated by the whistleblowing. The Second Circuit agreed with courts that have held 
that a plaintiff must show a retaliatory intent for the adverse employment action, and not 
merely that the whistleblowing was a contributing factor to the employer’s decision 
(Murray v. UBS Securities). 
  
Tax: The Fifth Circuit upheld a district court’s decision that rejected Exxon’s efforts to 
obtain more than $1 billion in tax refunds from the Internal Revenue Service. While the 
court considered several issues, a key consideration concerned the meaning of
 26 U.S.C. 
§ 6426(a), which allows taxpayers that produce renewable fuel to claim a “credit against” 
any excise tax they pay for nonrenewable fuels. The court held that Exxon could not 
deduct the full amount of excise taxes imposed on nonrenewable fuel without taking into 
account offsetting credits received for the production of renewable fuels. Joining two 
other circuits, the panel held that the renewable fuel tax credit reduces the recipient’s
  
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  excise tax burden, and also reduces the amount of the excise tax that the taxpayer may 
deduct from its gross incom
e (Exxon Mobil Corp. v. United States). 
 
Author Information 
 Michael John Garcia 
  Michael D. Contino 
Deputy Assistant Director/ALD 
Legislative Attorney 
 
 
 
 
 
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