Articles

  • Jul 11, 2024 | lexology.com | Sean Marotta |Danielle Stempel

    In Corner Post v. Board of Governors, the Supreme Court held that the default six-year statute of limitations for claims against the federal government, as applied to actions brought under the Administrative Procedure Act, does not begin to run until the plaintiff is actually injured by final agency action. Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote for a six-Justice majority. Justice Kavanaugh concurred. Justices Jackson, Sotomayor, and Kagan dissented.

  • Jun 28, 2024 | news.bloombergtax.com | Sean Marotta |Danielle Stempel

    The US Supreme Court issued its decision June 28 overruling the 40-year old Chevron deference, which required courts to defer to agency’s reasonable interpretations of ambiguous or silent statutes. So what is a regulated party to do now? Number 1: Don’t panic. Just because a rule was previously upheld under Chevron doesn’t automatically mean it will be overturned.

  • Nov 20, 2023 | lexology.com | Elizabeth Boison |Erin Brady |Logan Breed |Celine Crowson |Brian Curran |Aleksandar Dukic | +5 more

    The U.S. is one of the easiest jurisdictions in the world in which to do business. Regulatory barriers are generally low, establishing a branch or business entity is quick and easy, labor and employment laws are much more employer-friendly than in most other developed economies, and the legal system is well-developed and transparent.

  • Jun 30, 2023 | today.westlaw.com | Sean Marotta |Hogan Lovells

    (June 30, 2023) - Sean Marotta of Hogan Lovells discusses the U.S. Supreme Court's holding in Mallory v. Norfolk Southern Railway Co. that a Pennsylvania law that forced out-of-state corporations to consent to general jurisdiction in the state as a condition of registering to do business there was consistent with the federal Due Process Clause. After Daimler AG v.

  • Apr 10, 2023 | news.bloomberglaw.com | Sean Marotta

    A slide by a Paul Hastings senior associate meant to set “non-negotiable expectations” for junior deal lawyers took social media by storm last week. Trading in high-school sports cliches like "[n]o exceptions, no excuses,” the slide seemed to confirm every terrible stereotype about Big Law. Paul Hastings has said the slide does “not reflect the views of the firm or its partners,” and I’m glad it did.

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