Rule 19 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, concerning the required joinder of parties, ensures that all parties with an interest in an action are joined in the litigation. At any time during the suit, a court may determine that an absent party has a specific interest that requires its presence in the dispute. When the court cannot join the absent party, however, the court must use Rule 19(b) to determine whether to continue the litigation without the absentee or dismiss the suit entirely. Despite the potentially drastic consequence of dismissal, federal courts of appeals cannot agree on the proper standard of review for Rule 19(b) decisions. Should the court review the decision de novo as if it were examining the issue for the first t...
The codification of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in 1938 (the “Federal Rules”) created not o...
In recent decades, the paths from federal district courts to the federal circuit courts of appeals h...
The Uniform Arbitration Act is one of the most successful uniform laws. It has been enacted in 35 st...
The reformulation of compulsory joinder rules, urged by commentators for a decade, has been realized...
The comparative analysis of Rule 19(b) and legal rules governing the required joinder of parties in ...
The increasing number of public interest lawsuits suggests that federal courts increasingly will c...
The courts are entrusted with the implementation of required joinder of parties under Federal Rule o...
Unfortunately, any objective evaluation of current federal civil process will inevitably lead to the...
In this article, the author explores Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a) and standard of review ch...
In this article, the author explores Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a) and standard of review ch...
Litigants in federal district courts more often are asking judges to disqualify themselves from case...
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 19 defines circumstances in which a court can (and must) override th...
This action was brought in a South Carolina state court and removed to the federal district court on...
The Supreme Court promulgates rules of procedure (based on the proposals of subordinate rulemaking c...
A petition for writ of certiorari in Steel Valley Authority v. Union Switch & Signal Division, 809 F...
The codification of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in 1938 (the “Federal Rules”) created not o...
In recent decades, the paths from federal district courts to the federal circuit courts of appeals h...
The Uniform Arbitration Act is one of the most successful uniform laws. It has been enacted in 35 st...
The reformulation of compulsory joinder rules, urged by commentators for a decade, has been realized...
The comparative analysis of Rule 19(b) and legal rules governing the required joinder of parties in ...
The increasing number of public interest lawsuits suggests that federal courts increasingly will c...
The courts are entrusted with the implementation of required joinder of parties under Federal Rule o...
Unfortunately, any objective evaluation of current federal civil process will inevitably lead to the...
In this article, the author explores Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a) and standard of review ch...
In this article, the author explores Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a) and standard of review ch...
Litigants in federal district courts more often are asking judges to disqualify themselves from case...
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 19 defines circumstances in which a court can (and must) override th...
This action was brought in a South Carolina state court and removed to the federal district court on...
The Supreme Court promulgates rules of procedure (based on the proposals of subordinate rulemaking c...
A petition for writ of certiorari in Steel Valley Authority v. Union Switch & Signal Division, 809 F...
The codification of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in 1938 (the “Federal Rules”) created not o...
In recent decades, the paths from federal district courts to the federal circuit courts of appeals h...
The Uniform Arbitration Act is one of the most successful uniform laws. It has been enacted in 35 st...