Disputes over forum often center on whether a case should proceed in state or federal court. Removal to federal court can trigger a costly forum struggle. When a state case is removed to federal court only to be sent back to state court, the time and resources incurred in the detour are a toll on the judicial system and waste parties’ resources. We find erroneous removal to be an increasing problem. From 1993 to 2002, a period when state tort filings noticeably decreased, the number of removed diversity tort cases increased by about 10 percent to about 8,900 per year. By 2003, removed cases comprised over 30 percent of the federal diversity docket. The percentage of removals ultimately remanded to state court increased significantly to abou...
With nothing less than the survival of the civil justice system hanging in the balance, tort reforme...
In the modern tort reform movement that dates to the mid-1970s, courts have struck down a number of ...
The ubiquitous and somewhat careless use of the term “jurisdictional” by courts has spawned confusio...
Disputes over forum often center on whether a case should proceed in state or federal court. Removal...
Federal court procedural, especially jurisdictional ones, need to be governed by clear, effective, a...
A petition for writ of certiorari in Steel Valley Authority v. Union Switch & Signal Division, 809 F...
There is no justification for displacing state tort law by adopting a new federal law of torts in or...
Over the past several years, the legal community has given a great deal of thought to the problems c...
Although most current proposals for consolidation adjudication of mass tort cases call for these cas...
Most of the business of litigation comprises pretrial disputes. A common and important dispute is ov...
This Article provides a preview of Carnegie-Mellon University v. Honorable Maurice B. Cohill, Jr., a...
This Article explores, and ultimately embraces, a new exception to the complete diversity rule in re...
For decades, the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) has played a valuable role in human rights litigation in U...
This Note concludes that the Sixth Circuit was half right: when a civil action names both state and ...
Section 1441(b) of the removal statute prohibits removal of a diversity case if a defendant is a cit...
With nothing less than the survival of the civil justice system hanging in the balance, tort reforme...
In the modern tort reform movement that dates to the mid-1970s, courts have struck down a number of ...
The ubiquitous and somewhat careless use of the term “jurisdictional” by courts has spawned confusio...
Disputes over forum often center on whether a case should proceed in state or federal court. Removal...
Federal court procedural, especially jurisdictional ones, need to be governed by clear, effective, a...
A petition for writ of certiorari in Steel Valley Authority v. Union Switch & Signal Division, 809 F...
There is no justification for displacing state tort law by adopting a new federal law of torts in or...
Over the past several years, the legal community has given a great deal of thought to the problems c...
Although most current proposals for consolidation adjudication of mass tort cases call for these cas...
Most of the business of litigation comprises pretrial disputes. A common and important dispute is ov...
This Article provides a preview of Carnegie-Mellon University v. Honorable Maurice B. Cohill, Jr., a...
This Article explores, and ultimately embraces, a new exception to the complete diversity rule in re...
For decades, the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) has played a valuable role in human rights litigation in U...
This Note concludes that the Sixth Circuit was half right: when a civil action names both state and ...
Section 1441(b) of the removal statute prohibits removal of a diversity case if a defendant is a cit...
With nothing less than the survival of the civil justice system hanging in the balance, tort reforme...
In the modern tort reform movement that dates to the mid-1970s, courts have struck down a number of ...
The ubiquitous and somewhat careless use of the term “jurisdictional” by courts has spawned confusio...