One hates to seem ungrateful. Judges and scholars frequently call for Congress to fix problems in the law of jurisdiction and procedure, and Congress doesn\u27t usually intervene. In that light, the Jurisdiction and Venue Clarification Act ( JVCA ),[1] signed into law on December 7, 2011, ought to be a welcome improvement. And hopefully, on balance, it will be. But in at least one area that it attempts to clarify, the JVCA leaves much to be desired. Professor Arthur Hellman has called the JVCA the most far-reaching package of revisions to the Judicial Code since the Judicial Improvements Act of 1990. [2] The Act addresses a variety of removal issues-including unrelated federal and state claims, multiple defendants, removal of criminal cas...
Over the last two decades, and culminating in a quartet of cases decided in the last two terms, the ...
STUDENT SYMPOSIUM ON JURISDICTION AND VENUE: The place of trial of an action has great significance ...
Jurisdiction must become venue, concluded Professor Albert A. Ehrenzweig. Perhaps it should. More c...
The ubiquitous and somewhat careless use of the term “jurisdictional” by courts has spawned confusio...
Plaintiff began his action for breach of contract in a state court of Indiana. On defendant\u27s tim...
This article seeks to clear up the confusion over substantial federal questions. Part I provides a...
This Article examines the Court\u27s treatment of declaratory judgment actions. It demonstrates that...
Scholars have lavished attention on the substance of jurisdictional doctrines such as standing, moot...
More than a century ago, the then former Justice Curtis reminded the Bar that questions of jurisdic...
Traditionally understood, a congressional grant of federal subject matter jurisdiction alone does no...
The “Removal Jurisdiction Clarification Act” is a narrowly tailored legislative proposal designed to...
Federal court procedural, especially jurisdictional ones, need to be governed by clear, effective, a...
In a recent article, we proposed that the Declaratory Judgment Act of 1934 was intended, contrary to...
This Article explains why courts treat subject-matter jurisdiction as sacrosanct, demonstrates why t...
The mass action provision in the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 provides a federal forum for cert...
Over the last two decades, and culminating in a quartet of cases decided in the last two terms, the ...
STUDENT SYMPOSIUM ON JURISDICTION AND VENUE: The place of trial of an action has great significance ...
Jurisdiction must become venue, concluded Professor Albert A. Ehrenzweig. Perhaps it should. More c...
The ubiquitous and somewhat careless use of the term “jurisdictional” by courts has spawned confusio...
Plaintiff began his action for breach of contract in a state court of Indiana. On defendant\u27s tim...
This article seeks to clear up the confusion over substantial federal questions. Part I provides a...
This Article examines the Court\u27s treatment of declaratory judgment actions. It demonstrates that...
Scholars have lavished attention on the substance of jurisdictional doctrines such as standing, moot...
More than a century ago, the then former Justice Curtis reminded the Bar that questions of jurisdic...
Traditionally understood, a congressional grant of federal subject matter jurisdiction alone does no...
The “Removal Jurisdiction Clarification Act” is a narrowly tailored legislative proposal designed to...
Federal court procedural, especially jurisdictional ones, need to be governed by clear, effective, a...
In a recent article, we proposed that the Declaratory Judgment Act of 1934 was intended, contrary to...
This Article explains why courts treat subject-matter jurisdiction as sacrosanct, demonstrates why t...
The mass action provision in the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 provides a federal forum for cert...
Over the last two decades, and culminating in a quartet of cases decided in the last two terms, the ...
STUDENT SYMPOSIUM ON JURISDICTION AND VENUE: The place of trial of an action has great significance ...
Jurisdiction must become venue, concluded Professor Albert A. Ehrenzweig. Perhaps it should. More c...