Reserving appeals to final judgments has a long history in the federal courts, as do exceptions to that rule. The problem has less been the existence of the exceptions, but rather their scope and application. This article addresses two of those exceptions. One is permissive interlocutory appeals codified in section 1292(b) of the Judicial Code. That exception, requiring the permission of both the trial and appellate courts, has numerous advantages over other exceptions, has been frequently touted as such by the Supreme Court, and has been applied in several recent high-profile cases. In contrast, the collateral order doctrine, an ostensible interpretation of the final judgment rule of section 1291 of the Judicial Code, has long been the sub...
This article discusses the uncertainty of United States Courts of Appeals jurisdiction over non-fina...
Litigants have long tried to manufacture a final, appealable decision by voluntarily dismissing thei...
A bill seeking an injunction and an accounting was filed in a United States district court for alleg...
This articles addresses the collateral order doctrine beginning with its inception in Cohen v. Benef...
Appellate jurisdiction in the federal system has been properly criticized for both its doctrinal inc...
This Note argues that denials of motions for appointment of counsel should be immediately appealable...
The scope of appellate jurisdiction after final judgment has long been relatively clear. The scope o...
This Recent Development will trace briefly the history of the collateral order doctrine, focusing on...
In recent decades, the paths from federal district courts to the federal circuit courts of appeals h...
Although the nineteenth century\u27s final judgment rule no longer represents an absolute barrier to...
In early English appellate practice, the appealability of orders and decrees from a court of equity ...
Although some might consider the appellate review of remand orders as something of a jurisdictional ...
For half a century the Supreme Court has held that defendants in civil rights actions can avoid mone...
Most of the law of federal appellate jurisdiction comes from judicial interpretations of 28 U.S.C. §...
One does not have the right to appeal from an interlocutory order except in certain circumstances. I...
This article discusses the uncertainty of United States Courts of Appeals jurisdiction over non-fina...
Litigants have long tried to manufacture a final, appealable decision by voluntarily dismissing thei...
A bill seeking an injunction and an accounting was filed in a United States district court for alleg...
This articles addresses the collateral order doctrine beginning with its inception in Cohen v. Benef...
Appellate jurisdiction in the federal system has been properly criticized for both its doctrinal inc...
This Note argues that denials of motions for appointment of counsel should be immediately appealable...
The scope of appellate jurisdiction after final judgment has long been relatively clear. The scope o...
This Recent Development will trace briefly the history of the collateral order doctrine, focusing on...
In recent decades, the paths from federal district courts to the federal circuit courts of appeals h...
Although the nineteenth century\u27s final judgment rule no longer represents an absolute barrier to...
In early English appellate practice, the appealability of orders and decrees from a court of equity ...
Although some might consider the appellate review of remand orders as something of a jurisdictional ...
For half a century the Supreme Court has held that defendants in civil rights actions can avoid mone...
Most of the law of federal appellate jurisdiction comes from judicial interpretations of 28 U.S.C. §...
One does not have the right to appeal from an interlocutory order except in certain circumstances. I...
This article discusses the uncertainty of United States Courts of Appeals jurisdiction over non-fina...
Litigants have long tried to manufacture a final, appealable decision by voluntarily dismissing thei...
A bill seeking an injunction and an accounting was filed in a United States district court for alleg...