Friday, April 4, 2025

For Wednesday

Friday audio--Section A, Section B.  Essay # 7 due on Wednesday. Essay # 8 will post on Wednesday, due on Wednesday, April 16.

Two quick words on removal with multiple defendants in § 1446(b)(2).

    • Section (b)(2)(A) imposes unanimity--all defendants must agree to remove. But note that this is limited to defendants who have been joined. If 1 is served on June 1, it can remove without 2's consent if 2 has not been served.

    • Section (b)(2)(B) gives each defendant 30 days from service to remove (to file or join a Notice of Removal). But what happens if the defendants are not served at the same time, often months apart--what if 1 is served on June 1 and 2 is served on August 15 (past the time that 1 could remove)? Congress enacted (b)(2)(C) in 2011 and adopted the "Last-Served Defendant" Rule: The last-served defendant has 30 days to remove; any earlier-served  can consent to that removal, even if his own 30 days to remove have lapsed. So in the example above--2 has 30 days from August 15 to remove; 2 can consent to that removal, although it no longer can join.

Move to Personal Jurisdiction. Before doing anything, read Preliminaries of Personal Jurisdiction blog post for background. Then prep all of Shift to Minimum Contacts, including Glannon pp. 93-100Read and prep all of World Wide Volkswagen. Review FRCP 12(h)(1).

    • How can each party consent or submit to a court's jurisdiction? 

    • How does Shoe change the standard for personal jurisdiction? When can a court exercise personal jurisdiction over a defendant?

    • What is general personal jurisdiction, what is specific personal jurisdiction, and how do they differ? Look at Shoe and Daimler on this.

    • What is a "Long Arm Statute?" Why call it that?

    • How does the PJ analysis in federal court compare with the PJ analysis in state court? See FRCP 4(k).

    • Consider two cases. For both, review the removal statutes and piece together the removal process to understand how it will work in the case:

        1) A (TX) sues X (NY) for defamation Texas state court; the amount in controversy exceeds $ 75,000. You are X's attorney. You do not believe X is subject to personal jurisdiction in Texas. Your forum preferences, in order, are: 1) anywhere other than Texas; 2) federal court in Texas (if stuck in Texas); 3) state court in Texas (where he now is). As X's lawyer, what is your procedural strategy to obtain the most preferable forum?

        2) World Wide:

            Robinson (NY) sued Audi (a German company), Volkswagen of America (the US subsidiary, a NJ corporation with PPB in NJ), World-Wide Volkswagen (the regional distributor, a NY corporation), and Seaway (local dealer, a NY corporation). Robinson sued in Oklahoma state court. Audi and VWA are subject to PJ in Oklahoma, but prefer federal court. How can they make that happen?

            Also, Robinson and his family were driving through Oklahoma as part of a permanent move from NY to Arizona; Robinson had a new job and the family planned to stay in Arizona permanently. Why is Robinson a NY citizen?

    • How does World Wide adjust the two pieces of the Shoe standard and how do the two connect? How does a defendant establish "certain minimum contacts?" How can a defendant "purposefully avail?" In what way(s) did WW and Seaway, perhaps, purposefully avail?

Personal Jurisdiction Preliminaries

On Wednesday, we jump into into Personal Jurisdiction with International Shoe in 1945. But there is some background and about 70 years of stuff before Shoe. For purposes of time, this post provides basic background on civil litigation and personal jurisdiction prior to Shoe. Before reading the material assigned for Wednesday, read this post in conjunction with Glannon pp. 69-71 and these pages from Glannon's prior edition (he removed this material from the current edition, but has given permission to share the old pages).

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

For Thursday

Wednesday audio--Section A, Section B. Essay # 7 has posted. Essay # 8 will post on Thursday.

Review Supplemental Jurisdiction.

    • If VOA is also from Massachusetts, there is no supplemental jurisdiction over the hypothetical old contract claim. But what about the actual state claims over the 2012 BSO season?

    Ford (p.457) says § 1367(a) reaches the limits of Article III. What does that mean?

     • What is the connection between § 1367(a)'s standard and the standard for joinder in FRCP 13(a), (b), and (g); 14(a), and 20? There are 3 logical possibilities--what are they and which does Jones adopt? What does that mean for the counterclaim in Jones? What about the counterclaim in Kinsmann ((review our discussion of that from Responsive Pleadings).

    • Does § 1367(b) apply in Godin? What are the "jurisdictional requirements" of § 1332?

    • § 1367(b) identifies 3 categories of cases in which there is no supplemental jurisdiction. What do they have in common? Does § 1367(b) limit supplemental jurisdictional in the following (assume joinder is proper in all):

        • Metta wants to file a crossclaim against Nicely.

        • A (IA) v. X (NE). X (NE) impleads M (IA). A wants to file a claim against M.

        • A (FL) v. X (NY) and Y (FL) 

        • A (NJ) & B (DE) v. Walmart (DE/AR).

                (See also the discussion in Glannon (p.270) on this problem, especially as to the amount in controversy)

Then move to Removal. Read the assigned statutes (§§ 1441, 1446, and 1447) and map out the process for removal--when and how it functions and what the parties must do. What is the effect of filing a notice of removal? What is not required for a defendant to remove? What happens then? What is the timing for removal?

    • What is the logic of the "Forum Defendant Rule" of § 1441(b)(2)? 

    • A, Inc. (IL/IL) sues X, Inc. (PA/PA) in state court in Pennsylvania. The day after filing, X removes to federal court. Under § 1441(b)(2), is removal proper?

Essay # 7 (Sec. A)

Download Regular Type; Download Large Type; and after the jump. Due next Wednesday, April 9.

Two things in handling this case:

1) Math is required, as you must calculate time periods and number of dayss. You may use this site, which allows you to calculate the number of days between two dates.

2) You have pieces of deposition testimony and pieces of Affidavits. The Affidavit paragraphs are numbered. Each question and corresponding answer in the Dep is number (Q1 + A1; Q2 + A2; etc.). Be specific in what you cite to.

Pay attention to the role you are told to play.

Essay # 7 (Sec. B)

Download Regular Type; Download Large Type; Read after the jump. Due in class next Wednesday, April 9.

You have excerpts of an Affiadvit; the paragraphs are numbered. You have excerpts of a Deposition; the questions and corresponding answers are numbered (Q1 + A1; Q2 + A2; etc.). Please cite to evidence and be specific.

Pay attention to the role you are told to play.

 

 

Monday, March 31, 2025

Sample Answer--Essay # 6

Available outside my office.

Section A: Mean: 20.575; Median: 21

Section B: Mean: 17; Median: 17.375

Comments:

    • Not everything we touch in class must appear in your answer. Our class discussions, by design, cover everything about a topic; a single question may require less. The goal is to answer the question asked, not to show everything you know about the topic. So, here: You were asked to decide a motion to compel over four discovery requests. No need to discuss how the discovery process or the request for documents operates. You don't lose points for doing this. But you waste space that would allow you to write more and with more detail about what matters.

    • If you impose limits on the scope of discovery, you need to explain that limitation. If five years of emails is too long, explain why five years is too long and why a shorter period is more appropriate--besides "it's shorter."

    • Don't assume facts you do not have. You cannot say that searching her social-media feeds will require going through massive amounts of information--you do not know how active she is on social media. Maybe she does not post much, so it will not be "massive amounts of information." Or context matters for the inferences you can draw. Microsoft or GM or a government agency have "massive amounts of info" in ESI--they are huge corporations. An individual's social-media account is a different thing

    • As to Request # 1, she claims she does not take medicine. Wouldn't medical records--that show whether she takes medicine--be relevant to that?

    • Beware being too conclusory--you must explain. It is not enough to say something is relevant or proportionate--explain how and why. If your analysis or application consists of a single sentence, you need to do more.

    • (This point is not limited to discovery--it goes for everything): Don't define your case too narrowly. This case is was not about "religious discrimination" in the abstract. It is about a concrete context--plaintiff was fired because she refused to get a vaccine. She alleges that the employer violated Title VII by firing her (rather than exempting her from the vaccine) because she objected on religious grounds. But the case is "about" the firing and the vaccine as much as it is about religion. For purposes of this question, therefore, how should that affect discovery of things she said about her firing or about vaccine mandates or what medicines or procedures she does or does not receive?

Friday, March 28, 2025

For Wednesday

Friday audio--Section A, Section B. Essay # 7 will post on Wednesday, April 2, due Wednesday April 9.

Review the primer on federal question jurisdiction, along with § 1331 and Glannon pp. 25-30. You will need to have a basic grasp of "arising under" jurisdiction to understand supplemental jurisdiction. What federal claims do we see in VOA and in Godin?

We move to Supplemental Jurisdiction, which involves § 1367, an unfortunately confusing statute. Prep everything to cover Wednesday and Thursday. Review your notes from earlier in the semester on the definition of a claim, FRCP 8(a)(1), and joinder under FRCP 13, 14, 18, and 20.

    • Is there supplemental jurisdiction in VOA and in Godin and why?

    • Is there supplemental jurisdiction over Winston's counterclaims and why? Does it matter to whether the court can hear this counterclaim?

    • What might cause the court to decline jurisdiction under § 1367(c) and what facts might the court consider?

    • When should the parties and court rely on § 1367(a) and how does that reveal problems with how VOA pleaded its citizenship?

    • Why is it preferable to establish diversity jurisdiction rather than rely on § 1367?

    Ford says § 1367(a) reaches the limits of Article III. What does that mean?

     • What is the connection between § 1367(a)'s standard and the standard for joinder in FRCP 13(a), (b), and (g); 14(a), and 20? There are 3 logical possibilities--what are they and which does Jones adopt? What does that mean for the counterclaim in Jones? What about the counterclaim in Kinsmann?

    • Recall the (fictional) prior-contract claim between VOA and BSO. Can it be joined under the rules? Is there jurisdiction? How does the answer change if Sohm is a California citizen and the only member of VOA or if VOA has another member who is a Massachusetts citizen.

    • Does § 1367(b) apply in Godin? What are the "jurisdictional requirements" of § 1332?

    • § 1367(b) identifies 3 categories of cases in which there is no supplemental jurisdiction. What do they have in common? Does § 1367(b) limit supplemental jurisdictional in the following (assume joinder is proper in all):

        • A (FL) sues X (CA) and Y (CA). X files a cross claim against Y. Y impleads its insurer, M (CA).

        • A (IA) v. X (NE). X (NE) impleads M (IA). A wants to file a claim against M.

        • A (NJ) & B (DE) v. Walmart (DE/AR).

                (See also the discussion in Glannon on this problem, especially as to the amount in controversy)

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Federal Question Jurisdiction: A Primer

To save class time, a primer on Federal question juridiction; you can read and take notes here. Review this prior to class on Friday and next week, as it will be helpful in understanding  Supplemental Jurisdiction. , as well as looking at the assigned (and linked) statutes.

Read this in conjunction with the assigned (and linked) statutes; you can supplement this with Glannon pp. 25-30, which gives a nice basic overview.

We cover Federal Question Jurisdiction in greater depth in Federal Courts, an upper-level class that I encourage you to take during the next two years.

Yes, you are responsible for knowing this and it is fair game for the exam.

For Friday (Double Session)

Thursday audio--Section A, Section B. Essay # 6 due in class tomorrow.

We will finish Diversity Jurisdiction, so read and/or review all pieces of that. What are Mrs. Mas' possible domiciles and where did the court land as to her citizenship and why?

  • Consider the bases for jurisdiction (or lack of jurisdiction) of the following:

        • A (PR) v. X (DC) 

        • A (Cuba) v. X (FL)

        • A (Cuba) v. X (Venezuela)

        • A (TX) & B (China) v. X (Taiwan)

        • A (TX) & B (FL) v. X (Taiwan) & Y (FL)

        • A (Cuba/Lawful permanent resident domiciled in FL) v. X (FL)

        • A (NY) v. X (US Citizen domiciled in France) 

    • How do you determine domicile for corporations? What about for non-corporate business entities? What is the significance of entities having (potentially) multiple domiciles? Is there diversity jurisdiction in Morgan? What about in VOA?

    • What happens if adverse parties are entities (incorporated or unincorporated) with multiple citizenships? Consider whether there is jurisdiction (and on what bases) in the following cases:

        • A, Inc (DE/DE) v. X, Ltd. (NJ/Canada)

        • A LLC (NY/Mexico) v. X, Ltd. (NJ/Canada)

    • What is the purpose of the amount-in-controversy requirement? How do you determine if it is satisfied? What if the case seeks equitable relief (such as specific performance or an injunction)?

    • Plaintiff files in state court and wants to make clear the case cannot be filed in federal court because of the amount-in-controversy, by dramatically being .01 below the threshold. The complaint states "The amount in controversy is $ 74,999.99 and not one cent more." What did the lawyer do wrong, if the goal was to be .01 below?

    • What happens if the court finds non-diverse adverse parties and thus no jurisdiction?

We hopefully will begin Supplemental Jurisdiction, which involves § 1367, an unfortunately confusing statute. For tomorrow, prep § 1367(a), FRCP 18, and FRCP 82. Review your notes on the definition of a "claim" and consider the number, type, and jurisdictional bases for the claims in VOA and Godin.

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

For Thursday

Wednesday audio--Section A, Section B.  Essay # 6 due Friday--Please note that Plaintiff objected to those discovery requests from Defendant. Essay # 7 will post next Wednesday, April 2, due on Wednesday, April 9.

We continue with Diversity Jurisdiction; prep the entire section, which will take us through Friday. Review your notes (from the second day of the semester) on the basic structure of the federal judiciary and the difference between exclusive jurisdiction and concurrent jurisdiction.

    What are the policies behind diversity jurisdiction? How does placing cases in federal court serve those policies?

    • A(FL) sues X (NY) in federal court in Louisiana; is there subject matter jurisdiction?

    • What is complete diversity and minimal diversity? What is required, by what source of law, and why? How does that requirement relate to the purposes of diversity jurisdiction? What is the argument in favor of minimal diversity and what are the problems with that argument, given the purposes of diversity jurisdiction?

    • What is the statutory basis for jurisdiction in Mas and why? Why is it necessary to consider the citizenship of Mrs. Mas in addition to Mr. Mas?

    • Consider whether there is complete, minimal, or no diversity in the following:

        • A (FL) v X (FL)

        • A (FL) v. X (NY)

        • A (FL) v. X (NY) & Y (FL)

        • A (CA) v. X (NY) & Y (MN)

        • A (NY) & B (FL) v. X (NJ) & Y (FL)

        • A (NY) & B (FL) v. X (NJ) & Y (IL)

        • A (NY) & B (NY) v. X (CA) & Y (CA)

        • A (NY) v. Audi (Ger) & VWA (NJ) & WorldWide (NY) & Seaway (NY)

    • What is domicile? What is change of domicile? What facts and evidence can parties use to prove domicile?  Where is Mrs. Mas a citizen?

    • Consider the bases for jurisdiction of the following:

        • A (PR) v. X (DC) 

        • A (Cuba) v. X (FL)

        • A (Cuba) v. X (Venezuela)

        • A (TX) & B (China) v. X (Taiwan)

        • A (TX) & B (FL) v. X (Taiwan) & Y (FL)

        • A (Cuba/Lawful permanent resident domiciled in FL) v. X (FL)

        • A (NY) v. X (US Citizen domiciled in France)

Friday, March 21, 2025

For Wednesday

Friday audio--Section A, Section B. Essay # 6 posted; Essay # 7 will post next Friday.

We will finish Summary Judgment on Wednesday; review the remaining provisions of FRCP 56, along with the 7th Amendment. Look at the problems on pp. 408, 409, and 417 in Glannon. 

    • When can a party that will have the burden of persuasion/initial burden of production at trial (e.g., plaintiff on her claim) get summary judgment and what must that plaintiff do in support of the motion for summary judgment?

    • Consider the Black Non-Attorney who was denied a job as a lawyer because he is Black and because he is not an attorney. Under the substantive law of "mixed-motive cases," the plaintiff must show that race played a role in the decision, then the burden of production shifts to the defendant to show it would have made the same decision regardless of race. The plaintiff has the burden of persuasion.

        • How could each party move for summary judgment in this case? What are the two material facts the parties will fight over? What would each party need to do to support its motion on each issue?

    • What happens if both parties believe they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law?

    • What happens if a plaintiff gets partial summary judgment? What happens if a defendant gets partial summary judgment?

We then move to Subject Matter Jurisdiction. Prep Overview, in addition to FRCP 8(a)(1), 12(b)(1), 12(h)(3), and § 1332(a).

    • When does each party consider whether the case is in the correct forum?

    • How does each party (the plaintiff filing in federal court and the defendant sued in federal court) present issues about subject matter jurisdiction to the Court?

    • What is the constitutional structure of the federal judiciary? What does Article III tell us about the jurisdiction of the federal courts? What doesn't it tell us about the jurisdiction of the federal courts? What is the connection between Article III and the various statutes, such as § 1331 and § 1332? (Note: We discussed Art. III § 1 and the basic court structure at the beginning of the semester--review those notes).

Essay # 6

Download Regular Type; Download Large Type; and after the jump. Due in class Friday, March 28.