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The 2024 term of the Supreme Court of the United States began on October 7, 2024 and will conclude on October 5, 2025. The table below illustrates which opinion was filed by each justice in each case and which justices joined each opinion.
The Supreme Court of the United States has so far handed down five per curiam opinions during its 2024 term, which began October 7, 2024, and will conclude October 5, 2025. [1] Because per curiam decisions are issued from the Court as an institution, these opinions all lack the attribution of authorship or joining votes to specific justices ...
Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, 603 U.S. 369 (2024), is a landmark decision [1] of the United States Supreme Court in the field of administrative law, the law governing regulatory agencies.
United States courts of appeals may also make such decisions, particularly if the Supreme Court chooses not to review the case. Although many cases from state supreme courts are significant in developing the law of that state, only a few are so revolutionary that they announce standards that many other state courts then choose to follow.
Whether the Hobbs Act required the district court in this case to accept the Federal Communications Commission’s legal interpretation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act. October 4, 2024: January 21, 2025 Medical Marijuana, Inc. v. Horn: 23-365: Whether economic harms resulting from personal injuries are injuries to "business or property ...
Last year, the Supreme Court reinstated the fetal remains law, but not the ban on abortions for race, sex and developmental disabilities. GUNS In a dissent in the 2019 gun-rights case of Kanter v.
The 2023 term of the Supreme Court of the United States began October 2, 2023, and concluded October 6, 2024. The table below illustrates which opinion was filed by each justice in each case and which justices joined each opinion.
An appeal to the Second Circuit was likewise unsuccessful. Since the First Circuit had reached a different conclusion in a similar case in 1960 [5] that the Supreme Court had declined to hear, [6] the Court accepted Prima's certiorari petition in order to resolve the issue. Robert Herzog and Martin Coleman argued for the parties on March 12, 1967.