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Featured
Supreme Court Caseload Hits 160-Year Low
Not since the Civil War has the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in as few cases as it will this term — the latest milestone for the court's shrinking docket, and one attorneys say might have more to do with the high court's culture than its expanding emergency appeals caseload.
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February 12, 2026
McKesson Freed From Opioid Death Suit By Ga. Panel
The Georgia Court of Appeals said Thursday that drug distributor McKesson should have been freed from a suit attempting to hold it liable for a man's opioid overdose death, saying that a trial court applied the wrong statute of limitations to what was, at its core, a personal injury claim.
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February 12, 2026
Trump Nominates Judges for SC, Montana, Virgin Islands
President Donald Trump on Thursday announced district court nominees for South Carolina, Montana and the Virgin Islands, as well as one nominee for the International Trade Court.
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February 11, 2026
Avon Loses Appeal Over $51M Verdict In Mesothelioma Case
A California appellate court on Wednesday refused to wipe out a $51 million jury verdict against Avon for the cancer a woman says she got from using its asbestos-tainted talc, rejecting the cosmetic company's qualms with expert testimony and the trial court's evidentiary rulings.
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February 11, 2026
9th Circ. Partly Reverses Ford's 'Death Wobble' Class Cert.
The Ninth Circuit Wednesday partly remanded a class certification ruling in litigation brought by Ford buyers alleging some of the auto giant's pickup trucks have a steering defect known as the "death wobble," saying the record shows that the claimed defect manifested at varying rates in different model years.
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February 11, 2026
DC Circ. Questions Denial Of CFTC Whistleblower Award
The D.C. Circuit seemed skeptical Wednesday morning about the argument that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission wrongly denied a man a $147 million whistleblower incentive award after he tipped off the agency about foreign exchange market manipulation.
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February 11, 2026
SC High Court Probes Clerk's Misconduct In Murdaugh Appeal
The South Carolina Supreme Court on Wednesday closely inspected Alex Murdaugh's appeal claiming the jury in his high-profile double-murder trial was biased because of comments made by a clerk of court, voicing questions and statements favorable to the disgraced lawyer's arguments.
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February 11, 2026
Goldstein Says He Lost Millions On Poker In 2016
SCOTUSblog founder Thomas Goldstein told the Maryland federal jury in his tax fraud trial Wednesday that he lost nearly $3 million playing poker in 2016, directly contradicting charges that he underreported his gambling winnings, and pinned the blame for tax filing errors on his own miscalculations and shoddy work from his accountants.
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February 11, 2026
7th Circ. May Seek Ill. Justices' Input In Hyundai BIPA Row
A Seventh Circuit panel on Wednesday appeared skeptical about whether Hyundai Motor America had any control over biometric data captured by cameras installed in certain Hyundai vehicles and how a proposed class of drivers was injured under Illinois' biometric privacy law, but one judge suggested the case presents a question the state's top court may need to answer.
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February 11, 2026
Texas Justices Doubtful Spectrum Contract Is Static
Texas Supreme Court justices pushed back on San Antonio's claim that amendments to public telecommunications contract laws have no bearing on a utilities pole attachment agreement, saying Wednesday that the parties seemed to have an understanding that the contract would "evolve."
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February 11, 2026
Fed. Circ. Backs $85M Patent Antitrust Verdict Against Ingevity
The Federal Circuit on Wednesday declined to disturb a Delaware jury's $85 million antitrust verdict against Ingevity over it tying patent licenses to purchases of its automobile carbon filtering technology, rejecting the company's arguments that it was entitled to a certain statutory patent misuse defense.
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February 11, 2026
Colo. Justices Seem Skeptical Water Entity Can't Condemn
The Colorado Supreme Court justices appeared unpersuaded Wednesday by the "narrow" interpretation of law provided by the attorney representing a landowner who claims a water activity enterprise does not have legal authority to condemn land for water projects.
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February 11, 2026
Design Patent Dissent Highlights Frustration Over Subjectivity
Federal Circuit Judge Kimberly Moore's impassioned dissent to the court throwing out a design patent infringement suit captured how difficult it can be to frame comparisons, from a legal standard and based on differences in how people perceive the world, attorneys say.
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February 11, 2026
Former In-House Atty To Colo. Court: Fees Suit Isn't Frivolous
A former in-house attorney petitioned a Colorado Court of Appeals panel Wednesday to not find "frivolous" his request for the court to reverse a lower court's decision ordering attorney fees as a sanction against the attorney and his counsel in an underlying legal malpractice lawsuit.
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February 11, 2026
Justices Urged To Restore $181M Verdict Against AT&T, Nokia
Finesse Wireless LLC has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to take up its challenge to the Federal Circuit's decision wiping out a $181 million verdict against AT&T and Nokia, saying it's part of a long trend of the circuit court not respecting jury verdicts.
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February 11, 2026
Mobile Home Orgs Can't Bring Class Suit, Fla. Panel Says
A Florida panel ruled in a Wednesday split decision that two mobile homeowners' associations can't combine to bring one class action alleging unreasonable rent increases, citing state court rules that allow only one association to bring claims on behalf of its own members.
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February 11, 2026
11th Circ. Says Infirm FLSA Deal Precludes Nonwage Claims
The Eleventh Circuit shut down a lawsuit against a cannabidiol products company Wednesday, rejecting a former worker's argument that the failure to secure approval for a settlement ending a prior case where he alleged wage-and-hour violations left him an avenue to subsequently sue for fraud.
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February 11, 2026
Not 'Your Dad's DOJ': Recapping Year One Under Bondi
Even before her contentious congressional testimony on Wednesday, few U.S. attorneys general had been embroiled in so many controversies so early into their tenures as Pam Bondi, who critics and supporters alike say embodies a new era at the Justice Department.
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February 11, 2026
9th Circ. Won't Rethink GEO Wash. Detention Law Decision
A split Ninth Circuit spurned a bid from GEO Group on Wednesday for the full court to revisit a panel opinion siding with Washington state in the company's challenge of new health and safety standards for immigrant detention, with dissenting federal appellate judges contending that the earlier ruling "ignores both our circuit precedent and common sense."
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February 11, 2026
SNAP Recipients Appeal In 2nd Circ. Over Card Scam Suit
The Legal Aid Society and Freshfields US LLP have filed a Second Circuit appeal on behalf of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program recipients whose food benefits were stolen in widespread "skimming" scams, arguing that a lower court wrongly denied the victims replacement of their stolen benefits.
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February 11, 2026
Texas Justices Hint Gender-Affirming Care Suit Was Timely
Texas Supreme Court justices on Wednesday seemed open to reviving a lawsuit accusing a social worker of negligently recommending gender-affirming care for a young woman, asking defense attorneys if they could cite any instance of a medical provider telling a patient to "go harm yourself."
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February 11, 2026
9th Circ. Mulls DMCA Claim Against Microsoft And OpenAI
A group of software developers Wednesday urged the Ninth Circuit to revive their claim that Microsoft, GitHub and OpenAI violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act by stripping copyright management information from the developers' open source code, which the companies then used to develop the artificial intelligence tools for Microsoft's Copilot software.
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February 11, 2026
Del. Justices Grapple Over Truth Social Share Math
An attorney for the firm that helped launch Donald Trump's social media company told Delaware's justices Wednesday that a vice chancellor erred in requiring the venture to "prove a negative" in calculations of investor stakes in the run-up to the venture's special purpose acquisition company transaction.
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February 11, 2026
3rd Circ. Skeptical Of NJ's Broad 'Sensitive Places' Gun Ban
The Third Circuit signaled skepticism Wednesday toward New Jersey's sweeping list of gun‑free "sensitive places," repeatedly pressing the state in an en banc rehearing for founding‑era support and a workable limiting principle as judges questioned whether the law risks eviscerating the right to carry firearms.
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February 11, 2026
Fla. Panel Orders New Trial Over Forcible-Felony Instruction
A Florida appeals court ordered a new trial Wednesday for a man convicted of being a principal in a murder, after finding an incorrect jury instruction undermined his trial defense that the use of force was justified.
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February 11, 2026
Ariz. Justices Say Screening Didn't Create Client Relationship
The Arizona Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that a social worker who conducted a brief crisis screening of a patient could testify at an involuntary treatment hearing, holding that the interaction did not create a confidential behavioral health professional-client relationship and therefore was not protected by privilege.
Editor's Picks
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The Topics Appellate Attys Are Tracking Most Closely In 2026
A few far-reaching topics will dominate the appellate practice in 2026, attorneys predict, as appeals courts navigate an ever-growing thicket of Trump administration litigation and thorny questions involving artificial intelligence.
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4 High Court Cases To Watch This Spring
The U.S. Supreme Court justices will return from the winter holidays to tackle several constitutional disputes that range from who is entitled to birthright citizenship to whether transgender individuals are entitled to heightened levels of protection from discrimination.
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Circuit-By-Circuit Guide To 2025's Most Memorable Moments
Federal circuit courts in 2025 strained under a crush of Trump administration lawsuits, as judges directed animated language at litigants and even their fellow judges. And while the president only added a handful of appellate jurists, they had outsize impacts on circuit benches as they joined the cadre of conservatives seated in his first term.
Expert Analysis
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Reflections From High Court Oral Args Over Fed Gov. Removal
In the oral arguments last month for Trump v. Cook, which asks the U.S. Supreme Court to clarify the circumstances under which the president can remove a Federal Reserve Board governor, the justices appeared skeptical about ruling on the substantive issues in view of the limited record and analysis, say attorneys at Ballard Spahr.
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Opinion
Justices' Monsanto Decision May Fix A Preemption Mistake
In Monsanto Co. v. Durnell, the U.S. Supreme Court will address whether federal law preempts states' label-based failure-to-warn claims when federal regulators have not required a warning — and its decision could correct a long-standing misinterpretation of a prior high court ruling, thus ending myriad meritless state law personal injury claims, says Lawrence Ebner at Capital Appellate.
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Tips From Del. Decision Nixing Major Earnout Damages Award
The Delaware Supreme Court recently vacated in part the largest earnout-related damages award in Delaware history, making clear that the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing cannot be used to rescue parties from drafting choices where the relevant regulatory risk was foreseeable at signing, say attorneys at Sullivan & Cromwell.
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What's At Stake In Possible Circuit Split On Medicaid Rule
A recent Eleventh Circuit decision, reviving Florida's lawsuit against a federal rule that reduces Medicaid funding based on agreements between hospitals, sets up a potential circuit split with the Fifth Circuit, with important ramifications for states looking to private administrators to run provider tax programs, say Liz Goodman, Karuna Seshasai and Rebecca Pitt at FTI Consulting.
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Takeaways From 8th Circ. Ruling On Worker's 'BLM' Display
The Eighth Circuit's recent decision in Home Depot v. National Labor Relations Board, finding that Home Depot legally prohibited an employee from displaying Black Lives Matter messaging on his uniform, reaffirms employers' right to restrict politically sensitive material, but should not be read as a blank check, say attorneys at Hunton.
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NC Ruling Shows Mallory's Evolving Effects For Policyholders
A recent North Carolina decision, PDII v. Sky Aircraft, demonstrates how the U.S. Supreme Court's consequential jurisdiction decision in Mallory v. Norfolk Southern may permit suits against insurers anywhere they do business so long as the forum state has a business registration statute that requires submitting to in-state lawsuits, says Christopher Popecki at Pillsbury.
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Malpractice Claim Assignability Continues To Divide Courts
Recent decisions from courts across the country demonstrate how different jurisdictions balance competing policy interests in determining whether legal malpractice claims can be assigned, providing a framework to identify when and how to challenge any attempted assignment, says Christopher Blazejewski at Sherin & Lodgen.
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Tips For Financial Advisers Facing TRO From Former Firm
The Eighth Circuit's recent decision in Choreo v. Lors, overturning a lower court's sweeping injunction after financial advisers moved to a new firm, gives advisers new strategies to fight restraining orders from their old firms, such as focusing on whether the alleged irreparable harm is calculable, say attorneys at Kutak Rock.
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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Closure Highlights Labor Law Stakes
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's recently announced closure, after the U.S. Supreme Court denied relief from an injunction mandating that the newspaper restore terms from its previous collective bargaining agreement, illustrates that prematurely declaring an impasse and implementing unilateral changes carries risk, says Sunshine Fellows at Freeman Mathis.
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Unpacking Dormant Commerce Clause Cannabis Circuit Split
Federal courts have reached differing conclusions as to whether state-legal cannabis is subject to the dormant commerce clause, with four opinions across three circuit courts in the last year demonstrating the continued salience of the dormant commerce clause debate to the nation's cannabis industry, regulators and policymakers, say attorneys at Perkins Coie.
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Texas AG Wields Consumer Protection Law Against Tech Cos.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has targeted technology companies using the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, a broadly worded statute that gives the attorney general wide latitude to pursue claims beyond traditional consumer protection, creating unique litigation risks, say attorneys at Yetter Coleman.
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Emerging Themes In Nevada High Court Civil Litigation
The Nevada Supreme Court issued a series of significant civil rulings in 2025 that reflect recurring themes: a restrained approach to personal jurisdiction, heightened expectations of professionalism, close scrutiny of trial conduct, and a willingness to enforce contractual provisions that other jurisdictions might reject, says Michael Lowry at Wilson Elser.
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What To Know As Courts Rethink McDonnell-Douglas
Although the U.S. Supreme Court declined the latest opportunity to address the viability of the McDonnell-Douglas burden-shifting framework used in employment discrimination and retaliation claims, two justices and courts around the country are increasingly seeking to abandon it, which could potentially lead to more trials and higher litigation budgets, say attorneys at Jackson Lewis.
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A Primer On Law Enforcement Self-Defense Doctrine
In the wake of several shootings by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis, misconceptions persist about what the laws governing police use of force actually permit, and it’s essential for legal practitioners to understand the contours of the underlying constitutional doctrine, says Markus Funk at White & Case.
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Series
Teaching Logic Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Teaching middle and high school students the skills to untangle complicated arguments and identify faulty reasoning has made me reacquaint myself with the defined structure of thought, reminding me why logic should remain foundational in the practice of law, says Tom Barrow at Woods Rogers.