Case # | Name | Category | Court | Judge | Published |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
S249248
|
White v. Square, Inc.
Standing under Unruh Civil Rights Act claim extends to plaintiff who visited business's website, encountered discriminatory terms, and intended to make use of the business's services. |
Constitutional Law |
|
G. Liu | Aug. 13, 2019 |
17-15719
|
Davis v. Guam
Where ancestry is 'so closely associated with express racial classification,' use of ancestry-based criteria to limit voter participation in plebiscite violates Fifteenth Amendment. |
Constitutional Law |
|
M. Berzon | Jul. 30, 2019 |
18-10383
|
United States v. Ochoa
Special condition was not unconstitutionally overbroad because it properly abridged defendant's right to free speech in order to effectively address his sexual deviance problem. |
Constitutional Law |
|
B. Morris | Jul. 30, 2019 |
17-55380
|
The Koala v. Khosla
Where complaint alleges that State singled out press by withholding subsidy in response to disfavored speech, complaint alleges viable Free Press Clause cause of action. |
Constitutional Law |
|
M. Christen | Jul. 25, 2019 |
A147987
|
Cal. Advocates for Nursing Home Reform v. Smith
Although Health and Safety Code Section 1418.8 was unconstitutional on its face because it lacked a notice requirement, the court remanded with directions to implement procedural safeguards preserving its constitutionality. |
Constitutional Law |
|
J. Streeter | Jul. 24, 2019 |
C086182
|
Sacramentans for Fair Planning v. City of Sacramento
Project approval under general plan policy authorizing more intense development than zoning otherwise allowed was rationally related to city's legitimate goal of obtaining quality infill development that provided significant community benefit. |
Constitutional Law |
|
H. Hull | Jul. 22, 2019 |
15-35770
|
Disability Rights Montana v. Batista
Plaintiff's complaint, which described the horrific treatment of prisoners, was supported by factual allegations more than sufficient to 'state a claim to relief that was plausible on its face.' |
Constitutional Law |
|
R. Gould | Jul. 22, 2019 |
G055842
|
Center for Bio-Ethical Reform v. The Irvine Co.
Ban on 'grisly and gruesome' images constituted a content-based restriction, did not survive strict scrutiny, and was thus unconstitutional. |
Constitutional Law |
|
D. Thompson | Jul. 5, 2019 |
17-36038
|
Edge v. City of Everett
Because wearing pasties and g-strings while working at Quick-Service Facilities is not 'expressive conduct' within the meaning of the First Amendment, City's Dress Code Ordinance did not burden protected expression. |
Constitutional Law |
|
M. Christen | Jul. 5, 2019 |
16-15141
|
CTIA v. City of Berkeley
Challenged Berkeley ordinance was reasonably related to substantial governmental interest in public health and safety and its text was literally true, so it survived plaintiff's First Amendment challenge. |
Constitutional Law |
|
W. Fletcher | Jul. 3, 2019 |
17-35955
|
Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1015 v. Spokane Transit Authority
Appellant unreasonably rejected union's proposed advertisement in violation of the union's First Amendment rights; thus, district court's judgment affirmed. |
Constitutional Law |
|
R. Paez | Jul. 3, 2019 |
18-6210
|
Mitchell v. Wisconsin
Wisconsin statute assuming unconscious drivers' consent to blood test for drugs or alcohol provided an exception to the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement for blood draws. |
Constitutional Law |
|
S. Alito | Jun. 28, 2019 |
18-96
|
Tennessee Wine and Spirits Retailers Assn. v. Thomas
Section 2 of Twenty-First Amendment does not confer limitless authority to regulate alcohol trade; thus, under dormant Commerce Clause, State's two year residency requirement for license to operate liquor store was unconstitutional. |
Constitutional Law |
|
S. Alito | Jun. 27, 2019 |
F077508
|
In re J.M.
The First Amendment's protection of free speech does not extend to protecting malicious statements that have the ability to provoke an immediate breach of peace, including false bomb threats. |
Constitutional Law |
|
J. Detjen | Jun. 26, 2019 |
18-302
|
Iancu v. Brunetti
Lanham Act's 'immoral or scandalous' bar to trademark registration under Section 1052(a) was viewpoint-based and unconstitutional under the First Amendment. |
Constitutional Law |
|
E. Kagan | Jun. 25, 2019 |
18-485
|
McDonough v. Smith
The statute of limitations for fabricated evidence claim under Section 1983 began to run when the criminal proceedings against plaintiff terminated in his favor. |
Constitutional Law |
|
S. Sotomayor | Jun. 24, 2019 |
17-1717
|
American Legion v. American Humanist Assn.
The Bladensburg Cross did not violate establishment clause of the First Amendment because the cross became a symbol of fallen World War I soldiers' sacrifice. |
Constitutional Law |
|
S. Alito | Jun. 24, 2019 |
17-647
|
Knick v. Township of Scott
State-litigation requirement under 'Williamson County Regional Planning Comm'n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City' imposes an unjustifiable burden on takings plaintiffs, conflicts with the rest of takings jurisprudence, and must be overruled. |
Constitutional Law |
|
J. Roberts | Jun. 24, 2019 |
18-457
|
North Carolina Dept. of Revenue v. Kimberley Rice Kaestner 1992 Family Trust
Beneficiaries' residence could not, consistent with due process, serve as the sole basis for State's tax on trust income; thus, tax violated due process. |
Constitutional Law |
|
S. Sotomayor | Jun. 24, 2019 |
A148425
|
Park Management Corp. v. In Defense of Animals
Under the California Constitution, private property, such as amusement park entrances, is considered a public forum if the property is open to the public identical to public streets or parks. |
Constitutional Law |
|
T. Stewart | Jun. 24, 2019 |
16-1275
|
Virginia Uranium, Inc. v. Warren
Atomic Energy Act contains no provision preempting state law; thus, it does not preempt Virginia's law banning uranium mining. |
Constitutional Law |
|
N. Gorsuch | Jun. 18, 2019 |
17-1702
|
Manhattan Community Access Corp. v. Halleck
Operating public access channels on a cable system was not a traditional, exclusive public function; thus, petitioner was not a state actor subject to the First Amendment. |
Constitutional Law |
|
B. Kavanaugh | Jun. 18, 2019 |
17-15320
|
Duguid v. Facebook
Telephone Consumer Protection Act's exception for calls 'made solely to collect a debt owed to or guaranteed by the United States' was content-based and violated First Amendment; thus, exception severed. |
Constitutional Law |
|
M. McKeown | Jun. 14, 2019 |
17-35472
|
Greisen v. Hanken
In his First Amendment retaliation case, the district court properly determined plaintiff spoke as a private citizen and not a public employee. |
Constitutional Law |
|
R. Fisher | Jun. 3, 2019 |
17-16491
|
Arizona Libertarian Party v. Hobbs
Arizona state law signature requirements are reasonable restrictions that impose a modest burden on the Libertarian Party's right to free association; thus, the judgment is affirmed. |
Constitutional Law |
|
M. McKeown | Jun. 3, 2019 |
18-35115
|
Tschida v. Motl
Montana's prohibition against revealing ethics complaints' contents was facially unconstitutional, but former Commissioner of Political Practices was entitled to qualified immunity because reliance on the provision was not objectively unreasonable. |
Constitutional Law |
|
W. Fletcher | May 30, 2019 |
17-1174
|
Nieves v. Bartlett
Plaintiff's First Amendment claim that officers arrested him in retaliation for his speech failed because he initiated physical confrontation with officer; probable cause to arrest defeats retaliation claim. |
Constitutional Law |
|
J. Roberts | May 29, 2019 |
18-483
|
Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc.
States have legitimate interest in proper disposal of fetal remains; thus, Indiana's new law that prohibits treating fetal remains as 'infectious waste' and incinerating them alongside surgical byproducts survived rational basis review. |
Constitutional Law |
|
P. Curiam (USSC) | May 29, 2019 |
B284859
|
DiRaffael v. California Army Nat. Guard
Under federal regulations which govern selective retention of National Guard officers, states retain constitutional authority to appoint and terminate appointments of National Guard officers consistent with Second Militia Clause. |
Constitutional Law |
|
H. Bendix | May 28, 2019 |
15-16430
|
Perez v. City of Roseville
Precedent was not so clear that every reasonable official would understand terminating plaintiff due to her extramarital relationship with a fellow police officer violated her constitutional right to privacy. |
Constitutional Law |
|
S. Ikuta | May 22, 2019 |