Today's DJ has James Wagstaffe's article The High Court is upending decades of settled law -- The Supreme Court is increasingly willing to hear cases that overturn long-established precedents, reshaping constitutional and legal norms with little warning.
At bottom, therefore, we are living in an age where courts often take up cases aimed at reversing decades or more of established law when in earlier times it would simply be unthinkable even to hear such a challenge.
Bloomberg Law has Judicial Conduct Panel Denies Newman’s Reinstatement Bid -- A panel of seven appellate and district court judges rejected Judge Pauline Newman’s effort to regain her position on the Federal Circuit, where the 98-year-old jurist was suspended by her colleagues.
The judge has been fighting her suspension on two tracks. Administratively, the conference’s Committee on Judicial Conduct and Disability reviews disciplinary decisions by judicial councils for the 12 federal appellate courts. And in the courts, she petitioned the US Supreme Court to hear her case in mid March.Law360 has Judicial Conference Backs Latest Judge Newman Suspension
Law.com has Preparing for the Universe at Oral Argument by David Fine, head of the appellate practice at K&L Gates. His headings are: Preparing to Concede; Having Key Points at My Fingertips; Arriving at the Argument Bullet Points; Compiling the Binder; Testing the Argument; Lining Up for Final Approach; Cringing for Good Cause
And here's an unpub from 4/3 about a motion to tax appellate costs -- you don't see many cases addressing this issue!
The Appellate Practice Section of the SDCBA and the San Diego Appellate Inn of Court are jointly presenting the