Legal Sidebar
Congressional Court Watcher: Recent
Appellate Decisions of Interest to Lawmakers
(June 24–June 30, 2024), Part 1
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
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This edition of the
Congressional Court Watcher is divided into two parts because of the number of
notable decisions issued over the past week. This Legal Sidebar (Part 1) discusses Supreme Court activity
from June 24 through June 30, 2024. A
companion Legal Sidebar (Part 2) addresses decisions of the U.S.
courts of appeals from that period.
Decisions of the Supreme Court
Last week, the Supreme Court issued nine decisions in cases for which it heard arguments:
•
Abortion: In an unsigned order and over the dissent of four Justices, the Court dismissed
as improvidently granted the appeals in consolidated cases asking the Court to decide
whether the
Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) preempts aspects
of an Idaho law making it a crime for a health care provider to perform an abortion
except in limited circumstances, including when an abortion is necessary to prevent the
death of the pregnant woman. By dismissing the appeals, the Court did not decide the
merits of the preemption question, leaving it to the lower courts to decide the issues
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raised in the first instance. The Court also allowed to go into effect a district court’s
preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of the state law against providers that
perform EMTALA-required abortions in cases of medical emergency
(Moyle v. United
States; Idaho v. United States).
•
Administrative Law: In a 6-3 ruling, the Court overruled the administrative law doctrine
known as
Chevron deference, established by the Court in
Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural
Resources Defense Council, Inc. The doctrine required federal courts to defer to a federal
agency’s reasonable interpretation of ambiguous statutory provisions the agency
administers. The Court held that the
Chevron framework violates
Section 706 of the
Administrative Procedure Act, which requires courts to “decide all relevant questions of
law, interpret constitutional and statutory provisions, and determine the meaning or
applicability of the terms of an agency action.” Although petitioners also challenged
Chevron on constitutional grounds, the Court’s opinion did not address those arguments
(Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo; Relentless, Inc. v. Dep’t of Com.).
•
Bankruptcy: In a 5-4 decision, the Court held that the Bankruptcy Code does not
authorize a bankruptcy court to approve, as part of a plan of reorganization under Chapter
11 of the Bankruptcy Code, a release and injunction that includes nonconsensual releases
of legal claims against nondebtors (i.e., third parties who have not filed for bankruptcy),
except where specifically provided for in asbestos-related cases. The decision reverses a
bankruptcy court’s confirmation of the reorganization plan for pharmaceutical
manufacturer Purdue Pharma, which filed for bankruptcy after costly civil litigation over
its opioid product OxyContin. The plan included the release of many civil litigation
claims against the Sackler family, which owned and operated Purdue Pharma for decades.
The release was contingent upon the family agreeing to contribute billions of dollars to
the company’s bankruptcy estate to fund settlements with private litigants and various
government entities. The Supreme Court held that the Bankruptcy Code does not provide
for the release of claims against nondebtors such as the Sacklers without the claimants’
con
sent (Harrington v. Purdue Pharma, L.P.).
•
Criminal Law & Procedure: In a 6-3 decision, the Court held tha
t 18 U.S.C.
§ 666(a)(1)(B)—which generally makes it a crime for a state or local government agent
to corruptly solicit, demand, or agree to accept things of value worth at least $5,000 with
the intent “to be influenced or rewarded in connection” with government action—does
not apply to gratuities, which are rewards for actions the payee has already taken or is
already committed to take without any quid pro quo agreement
(Snyder v. United States).
•
Criminal Law & Procedure: The Court decided 6-3 that the government’s charge of a
criminal defendant with corruptly obstructing, influencing, or impeding an official
proceeding in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(c)(2) was premised on an overbroad
interpretation of the provision. The defendant was charged with several offenses in
connection to an alleged attempt to disrupt congressional certification of the 2020
presidential election results on January 6, 2021. The majority’s decision that the
defendant had been improperly charged under Section 1512(c) in relation to his breach of
the Capitol building turned on the relationship
between 18 U.S.C. § 1512(c)(1) and
(c)(2). Section 1512(c)(1) imposes a criminal penalty on one who “alters, destroys,
mutilates, or conceals a record, document, or other object, or attempts to do so, with the
intent to impair the object’s integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding.”
Section 1512(c)(2)—the provision under which the defendant was charged—punishes
one who “otherwise obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts
to do so.” The Court majority reasoned that Section 1512(c)(2) must be read in
conjunction with the limited reach of Section 1512(c)(1). Against this backdrop, the
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majority held that to violate Section 1512(c)(2), obstructive conduct must involve some
action as to a document, record, or other object with the intent to impair the item’s use in
an official proceeding
(Fischer v. United States).
•
Environmental Law: In a 5-4 decision, the Court agreed to stay the implementation of
the
Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) “Good Neighbor” Plan—intended to
limit ozone-forming emissions from power plants and industrial facilities—against the
plaintiff states while litigation proceeds in the D.C. Circuit. Under the Clean Air Act
(CAA), a state must submit a State Implementation Plan (SIP) for EPA’s approval
detailing how it will meet national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) set by the
agency. If EPA concludes that the SIP is inadequate, the agency will issue a federal plan
in its place. The CAA imposes “good neighbor” requirements on upwind states’ SIPs to
ensure that emission activities within their jurisdictions do not impede downwind states
from meeting NAAQS. In 2023, after EPA denied several upwind states’ SIPs, the agency
issued the “Good Neighbor” Plan to establish an emission-control program in place of
those SIPs. Here, the Court decided that a stay was appropriate, in part, because plaintiffs
were likely to succeed in their claim that the EPA plan is unreasonable because the plan
was based on more upwind states following the plan than were ultimately made subject to
it (Ohio v. EPA; Kinder Morgan, Inc. v. EPA; Am. Forest & Paper Ass’n v. EPA; U.S.
Steel Corp. v. EPA).
•
Housing: The Court ruled 6-3 that city ordinances imposing generally applicable
restrictions on camping on public property do not violate the
Eighth Amendment’s
prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment if enforced against homeless persons who
lack access to temporary
shelter (City of Grants Pass v. Johnson).
•
Securities: In a 6-3 decision, the Court held that the Securities and Exchange
Commission’s (SEC’s) administrative adjudication of securities fraud cases seeking civil
penalties violates the
Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial. The Court identified two
pertinent factors for deciding whether an action is covered by the Seventh Amendment:
(1) whether the action is akin to a common law cause of action and (2) whether the
remedy is the type that traditionally was obtained only in a court of law. The Court held
that both factors were met here. Because the case was resolved on Seventh Amendment
grounds, the Court declined to reach other constitutional challenges raised in the case,
including (1) whether Congress violated the nondelegation doctrine in giving the SEC
discretion to bring enforcement actions either administratively or through a suit in an
Article III court and (2) whether the statutory removal protections given to SEC
administrative law judges infringe on the President’s power to remove executive officers
(SEC v. Jarkesy).
•
Speech: In a 6-3 ruling, the Court decided that plaintiff states and individual social media
users lacked standing to bring suit to enjoin certain executive branch officials from
communicating with
social media platforms regarding their content-moderation
decisions. Although the Court viewed the case record as showing some government
influence in the platforms’ content-moderation choices, the Court ruled that the plaintiffs
failed to show specific causation between government action and the social media
platforms’ discrete acts of content moderation affecting them. The Court reversed the
judgment of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit that had partially
affirmed a preliminary injunction blocking such communication
s (Murthy v. Missouri).
The Court also granted certiorari to consider the following cases next term:
•
Bankruptcy: The Court agreed to hear a case from the Tenth Circuit on whether the
government’s waiver of sovereign immunity in
Section 106(a) of the Bankruptcy
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Code permits a bankruptcy trustee to avoid under
Section 544(b)(1) of the Code a transfer
of property—here tax payments to the Internal Revenue Service—under state law, when
sovereign immunity would bar such a claim outside the bankruptcy case
(United States v.
Miller).
•
Civil Rights: The Court granted certiorari in a case from the Eleventh Circuit on whether
Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act permits a former employee to sue for
discrimination based on postemployment distribution of fringe benefits. The plaintiff
sued her former employer under Title I for terminating the health insurance subsidy she
had received when she retired for qualifying disability reasons, but the appeals court
concluded that a Title I plaintiff must hold or seek a position with the defendant at the
time of the allegedly discriminatory
act (Stanley v. City of Sanford).
•
Environmental Law: The Court agreed to review a case from the D.C. Circuit asking the
Court to determine whether th
e National Environmental Policy Act, which directs federal
agencies to consider the environmental effects of proposed actions, requires consideration
of environmental impacts that may extend beyond the proximate effects over which the
agency exercises jurisdiction
(Seven Cnty. Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County).
•
Health: The Court agreed to hear a case from the Sixth Circuit on whether a Tennessee
law that restricts the use of certain medical treatments when the treatment is intended to
allow a minor to identify with or live as an identity inconsistent with the minor’s sex or to
treat purported discomfort or distress from a discordance between the minor’s sex and
asserted identity violates constitutional equal protection princip
les (United States v.
Skrmetti).
•
Intellectual Property: The Court granted certiorari in a case from the Fourth Circuit
regarding a provision of the Lanham Ac
t, 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a), which provides that when
a court finds the “the amount of the recovery based on profits is either inadequate or
excessive, the court may in its discretion enter judgment for such sum as the court shall
find to be just.” The Court is asked whether this authority allows a court to order a
defendant to disgorge profits from a legally separate nonparty corporate affiliate
(Dewberry Grp., Inc. v. Dewberry Engineers, Inc.).
•
Sovereign Immunity: The Court agreed to hear a case from the D.C. Circuit involving
the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act’s expropriation exception,
28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(3),
which waives sovereign immunity for rights in property taken in violation of international
law. The exception requires the property in question, or “any property exchanged for such
property,” to either be (1) “present in the United States in connection with a commercial
activity” or (2) “owned or operated by an agency or instrumentality of the foreign state
and that agency or instrumentality is engaged in a commercial activity in the United
States.” The Court is asked to determine the showing required to satisfy this commercial
nexus requirement, as well as the pleading standard and the burden of proof for such
claims
(Republic of Hungary v. Simon).
•
Veterans: The Court granted certiorari in a case from the Federal Circuit on whether a
federal civilian employee called into active duty service during a national emergency is
entitled to differential pay under
5 U.S.C. § 5538, even if that employee is not involved in
a contingency operation related to the national emergen
cy (Feliciano v. Dep’t of Transp.).
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Author Information
Michael John Garcia
Deputy Assistant Director/ALD
Congressional Research Service
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