The Supreme Court’s June 28 ruling to overturn the Chevron doctrine(opens a new window)came in two cases challenging the 1984 decision:Loper Bright Enterprises v. RaimondoandRelentless, Inc v. Department of Commerce. By a 6-3 margin, the court overruledChevron, holding that courts must...
The Supreme Court released three major decisions on Friday. The court ruled to overturn the decades-old Chevron doctrine, limiting how federal agencies can enforce regulations, raised the bar for obstruction charges against Jan. 6 rioters, and upheld a law that lets cities ban homeless people fro...
The petitioners seek to overturn or greatly limit a 39-year-old Supreme Court case,Chevron vs. Natural Resources Defense Council. That ruling said that if a federal law is silent or ambiguous on a specific question, courts should defer to government agencies’ interpretation of the statute. Adv...
The Supreme Court appears to be seeking a way to diminish the Chevron doctrine - without completely overruling the 40-year-old legal theory that helps federal agencies defend their rules on public health, food safety and climate change. During oral arguments Wednesday morning in Relentless v. ...
When the Court issues its opinion, it will likely take one of three potential approaches. First, the Court may discard theChevrondoctrine in its entirety. Second, the Court may adopt a middle-ground approach that would limitChevron's applicability – including, for example, by fol...
Supreme Court overturns the Chevron Doctrine –Some people fret about the “deep state,” but practically speaking they should be concerned about the “administrative state.” The good news is that the Supreme Court may rule that bureaucrats don’t have leeway to impose more red tape in the ...
Supreme Court: Trump aide Steve Bannon must go to jail Chevron doctrine overturned: Republicans, big business praise Supreme Court decision Supreme Court blocks Purdue Pharma opioid settlement, threatening billions of dollars for victims "When he uses his official powers in any way, under the majori...
reading through the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent rulings, when the phone rang. On the other end was my friend the general counsel, who apparently had been doing the same. “Oh man,” he said, launching into a diatribe. “This ruling to overturn the Chevron doctrine is going to be ...
Because the Supreme Court now has a 5-4 conservative majority, some fear the high court is eager to chip away atChevronor overturn it completely and warn that could lead to a weakening of environmental, workplace and immigration regulations. ...
Supreme Court Update: June 2024 June 7, 2024doctrine of equivalents, double patenting, notice-and-comment, obviousness, paid, patent eligibility, patent law, Supreme Court, tortious interferenceDennis Crouch To continue reading, become a Patently-O member. Already a member? Simply log in to ...