595 results for 'cat:"Administrative Law"'.
Per curiam, the Oklahoma Supreme Court approves the Lee Griffin's resignation. Griffin is aware the bar is investigating grievances filed against her, including that she allegedly failed to disburse funds transferred to her upon the sale of marital property in three separate divorce proceedings, as well as failing to take action to seek grandchildren visitation rights on a client's behalf with attorney fees having been paid in advance. She also has pending criminal charges for embezzlement. The attorney's resignation was freely and voluntarily entered.
Court: Oklahoma Supreme Court, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 6, 2024, Case #: SCBD-7650, Categories: administrative Law, Fiduciary Duty, Attorney Discipline
Per curiam, the Oklahoma Supreme Court approves the Joseph Dewayne Kalka's resignation. Kalka pleaded guilty to charges of domestic abuse by attempted strangulation of his wife and striking her head, face and body. The attorney's resignation affidavit was freely and voluntarily entered, with full awareness of the consequences.
Court: Oklahoma Supreme Court, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 6, 2024, Case #: SCBD-7576, Categories: administrative Law, Assault, Attorney Discipline
J. Blacklock finds that the court of appeals improperly affirmed a jury verdict in favor of two City of Denton employees who sued the city under the Texas Whistleblowers Act after they were allegedly fired for reporting a member of the city council for meeting with a reporter at their home, violating the Public Information Act and the Open Meetings Act. The city council members are not paid, thus making the council member not an employee who would otherwise be covered under the Act. Furthermore, her actions were hers alone and not on behalf of the city council. Reversed.
Court: Texas Supreme Court, Judge: Blacklock, Filed On: May 3, 2024, Case #: 22-1023, Categories: administrative Law, Government, Whistleblowers
J. Childs vacates the district court's finding for the Small Business Administration on a concert tour company's challenge to the agency's rejection of its application for a $4.9 million grant in connection with Covid-19 under the Shuttered Venue Grants program. The agency ignored relevant proof supporting the company's eligibility for the grant, including more than 100 pages of creative elements it used to design concerts for the band, Twenty One Pilots, and its financial role in the tour. Vacated.
Court: DC Circuit, Judge: Childs, Filed On: May 3, 2024, Case #: 22-5253 , Categories: administrative Law, Government
J. Fisher finds that the lower court improperly annulled the decision authorizing an oversight agency to use an aquatic herbicide to control spread of the invasive Eurasian watermilfoil in Lake George. The board of the Adirondack Park Agency rationally approved the permit, as members received scientific studies and research demonstrating that the herbicide would be minimally harmful to native plants and water insects and more cost-effective than previously attempted eradication methods. Meanwhile, the agency was due judicial deference on factual evaluations within its area of expertise. Reversed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Fisher, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: CV-23-0672, Categories: administrative Law, Environment
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J. Howard reverses, in part, a workers' compensation review board decision to uphold an administrative law judge's decision to grant only a 5 percent impairment to a worker, rather than the 35 percent recommended by her treating doctor. The board failed to require the judge explain why the doctor's impairment ratings were not clear. Reversed in part.
Court: DC Court of Appeals, Judge: Howard, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: 22-AA-0957, Categories: administrative Law, Workers' Compensation
J. Procaccini promulgates amendments to the Minnesota General Rules of Practice for the District Courts and Minnesota Rules of Civil Appellate Procedure as two-year pilot project. The amendments allow for continuances for the purpose of allowing personal leave for attorneys under certain covered circumstances, including the birth or adoption of a child, health conditions, the death of a family member or the need to care for a spouse, household member or family member.
Court: Minnesota Supreme Court, Judge: Procaccini, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: ADM09-8009, Categories: administrative Law, Civil Procedure
J. Peterson grants the U.S. government officials' motion to dismiss the husband and wife's lawsuit asking the court to compel the officials to finish adjudicating a family-based visa petition conditionally approved in 2022 for the wife, who is a citizen of Uganda. Given controlling case law, the husband and wife have not proven their 18-month wait for a consular interview is unreasonable, in part due to evidence in the record of backlogs caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Court: USDC Western District of Wisconsin, Judge: Peterson, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: 3:23cv520, NOS: Other Immigration Actions - Immigration, Categories: administrative Law, Immigration, Covid-19
J. Virden finds the circuit court properly granted the behavioral health facility's petition to involuntarily commit the psychiatric patient. The patient absconded after a supervisory petition was granted, then was admitted to the facility with exacerbated psychosis. The patient, diagnosed with bipolar mania, has not complied with medication requirements and has refused therapy. She has been uncooperative, irritable and paranoid, has demonstrated poor judgement, and lacks insight into her condition. She has also been arrested for assault and presents a danger to herself and others. The appeals court defers to the circuit court's superior position. Affirmed.
Court: Arkansas Court Of Appeals, Judge: Virden , Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: CV-23-465, Categories: administrative Law, Health Care, Commitment
[Consolidated.] J. Walker refuses to grant petitions for review filed by environmental groups that challenge the Federal Energy Regulator Commission's certification of an expansion of pipelines and facilities for the Evangeline Pass Expansion Project in the Southeastern U.S. The agency reasonably explained its decision, and the certification was reasonable.
Court: DC Circuit, Judge: Walker, Filed On: April 30, 2024, Case #: 22-1101 , Categories: administrative Law, Energy, Environment
J. Streeter finds that the trial court properly denied writ relief to a cardroom whose application to expand was denied by the state gambling commission. A local voter-approved measure that would enable the expansion is not exempt from the Gambling Control Act, which requires approval from the commission. Also, the ballot language for the measure did not substantially comply with a requirement for neutral, concise wording. And the commission rightly rejected the cardroom's application because the measure did not comply with statute. Affirmed.
Court: California Courts Of Appeal, Judge: Streeter, Filed On: April 30, 2024, Case #: A168427, Categories: administrative Law, Elections, Municipal Law
J. Byrne finds that the trial court properly in part ruled in a case in which a court reporter and her firm sued the Judicial Brand Certification Commission for allowing another reporting firm to provide services without proper certification. The trial court correctly denied the commission’s plea to the jurisdiction for the reporter’s petition for mandamus relief. However, the trial court incorrectly denied the commission’s plea to the jurisdiction against the judicial review, because such a review is not an available option within this administrative context. Affirmed in part.
Court: Texas Courts of Appeals, Judge: Byrne, Filed On: April 30, 2024, Case #: 03-22-00245-CV, Categories: administrative Law, Government, Immunity
J. Stevens finds that the commission properly disqualified the employee from unemployment benefits after he tendered his resignation to his employer. Substantial evidence shows that the employee voluntarily resigned and was not constructively discharged due to an unbearable work environment. Affirmed.
Court: Missouri Court Of Appeals, Judge: Stevens, Filed On: April 30, 2024, Case #: ED111971, Categories: administrative Law, Employment
J. Pirtle finds the county court properly dissolved the temporary restraining order preventing demolition of the property. The homeowner was issued a notice of property violations, and the restraining order was implemented pending resolution of litigation. The owner’s witness was found to not be credible, while the city’s witnesses were found to be credible. The multiple violations, pending for several years, had not been resolved. The owner also failed to demonstrate it lacked an adequate remedy at law. Affirmed.
Court: Nebraska Court Of Appeals, Judge: Pirtle , Filed On: April 30, 2024, Case #: A-23-680, Categories: administrative Law, Municipal Law, Injunction
J. Pucinski finds that the lower court properly dismissed the estate's suit challenging a former correctional officer's termination for punching an inmate in the face. In order to challenge that hearing board's decision based on an alleged illegal composition of the board, the officer was required to assert his challenge while his case was still pending. Affirmed.
Court: Illinois Appellate Court, Judge: Pucinski, Filed On: April 29, 2024, Case #: 221088, Categories: administrative Law, Civil Procedure
J. Smith finds the bankruptcy court improperly denied the Electric Reliability Council's motion to abstain. The energy company filed for bankruptcy after receiving a bill for nearly $300 million resulting from the council's production-incentivizing price manipulation in response to the 2021 winter storm in Texas. The council sought payment and the energy company initiated an adversarial proceeding challenging its proof of claim. The council moved to dismiss, alternatively requesting the bankruptcy court abstain. Though the circuit finds the council is not an arm of the state, and not entitled to immunity, the U.S. Supreme Court requires abstention under guiding case law. Texas’s interest in utility regulation and litigation, and its protection of the electricity-related public interest, is the more significant concern. Reversed.
Court: 5th Circuit, Judge: Smith , Filed On: April 29, 2024, Case #: 22-20603, Categories: administrative Law, Bankruptcy, Energy
J. Smith finds the district court properly denied the firearm advocates' request for a preliminary injunction. The advocates challenge provisions of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act of 2022, saying the government has shown no historical analogue for expanded background checks for 18- to 20-year-olds. The 10-day waiting period for background checks is not abusive, nor does it impose a de facto prohibition on possession. Existing case law makes clear that background checks are constitutional. Affirmed.
Court: 5th Circuit, Judge: Smith , Filed On: April 26, 2024, Case #: 23-10837, Categories: administrative Law, Constitution, Firearms
J. AliKhan grants summary judgment to the FBI in the information seekers' Freedom of Information Act suit related to the 2012 attacks on the U.S. Embassy in Benghazi, Libya. The FBI has adequately established that withheld records are part of an ongoing investigation of the attacks, and existing public accounts of the attacks do not undermine the agency's concerns about interference with that investigation.
Court: USDC District of Columbia, Judge: AliKhan, Filed On: April 26, 2024, Case #: 1:14cv1589, NOS: Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) - Other Suits, Categories: administrative Law, Public Record, Agency
J. Lawrence finds that the lower court properly dismissed the complaint in this declaratory judgment action concerning certain immunization requirements for emergency medical service workers. Contrary to the appellants' argument on appeal, "the EMS Board did not exceed its statutory authority in issuing the EMS immunization rule." Affirmed.
Court: Maine Supreme Court, Judge: Lawrence, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: 2024ME30, Categories: administrative Law, Health Care
J. Freudenberg finds the district court improperly dismissed the apartment owner's complaint. The owner alleges a notary public covered under the surety company’s bond improperly altered a property deed upon which the apartment owner is a grantee, and the court dismissed for failure to join the notary as a necessary party. Commas separating "notary" from “sureties” in the guiding statute suggest the legislature did not mean to require such a claim to group the notary public and the surety together in the same action. Reversed.
Court: Nebraska Supreme Court, Judge: Freudenberg , Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: S-23-357, Categories: administrative Law, Property, Fiduciary Duty
J. Lange denies a Department of the Interior motion to dismiss an amended complaint involving self-determination contracts under the Tribally Controlled Schools Act of 1988 under which the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe received federal funds to operate tribal schools that otherwise would have been operated by the federal government. The government collected a deficit of funds that the school would have otherwise received after the Tribe used some of the money to fund tribal government operations other than schools. The Tribe also claimed that the government collected more than the total unearned-revenue balance. The alleged overcollection claim in the amended complaint remains but all the claims from the original complaint remain foreclosed.
Court: USDC South Dakota, Judge: Lange, Filed On: April 24, 2024, Case #: 3:21cv3018, NOS: Administrative Procedure Act/Review or Appeal of Agency Decision - Other Suits, Categories: administrative Law, Education, Native Americans
J. Moss partially grants the FDA's motion for summary judgment and the tobacco vaporizer maker's cross-motion for summary judgment in a Freedom of Information Act suit brought by the vape maker seeking information on its denied premarket tobacco applications. The FDA's withholding of records under an exemption for "inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters" was proper because those documents were part of the deliberative process, regardless of the vape maker's various arguments that they were produced after the agency's decisions were made, because they were nevertheless produced before those decisions were finalized and published. Memos summarizing scientific data also are not privilege-free scientific reports in this case, since they were compiled for deliberative purposes. The agency has also established that the release of withheld memos would cause foreseeable harm and would chill the ongoing supervisory review process.
Court: USDC District of Columbia, Judge: Moss, Filed On: April 23, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv2853, NOS: Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) - Other Suits, Categories: administrative Law, Government, Public Record
J. Walker upholds the tax court's finding for the IRS on a Swiss couple's challenge to $500,000 in penalties assessed after they had voluntarily amended their tax returns to include millions in a Swiss bank account they had not previously disclosed. Contrary to the couple's argument, the corrected returns do not protect them from penalties and the assessments were not untimely. Affirmed.
Court: DC Circuit, Judge: Walker, Filed On: April 23, 2024, Case #: 22-1308 , Categories: administrative Law, Tax
J. Rivera finds that the appellate division improperly held that changes to for-profit nursing homes' Medicaid rates could not be made retroactively because legislation authorizing the changes to help close a state budget gap specified an April 1 effective date, and new rates were not made retroactive when homes were notified months after federal approval. Meanwhile, the usual 60-day advance notice requirement was not applicable due to the urgency of the fiscal crisis. Reversed in part.
Court: New York Court Of Appeals, Judge: Rivera, Filed On: April 23, 2024, Case #: 31, Categories: administrative Law, Civil Procedure, Medicaid