This Article begins with what should seem a relatively straightforward proposition: it is impossible to fully understand the holding of a case without understanding its “deference regime”—the standard of review or burden of proof that governs the case. If a court holds in the context of a habeas petition that a constitutional right was not “clearly established,” that does not mean that the court would hold that the right does not exist were it writing on a blank slate. If a court refuses to invalidate a granted patent, which is presumed valid and can only be held invalid upon a showing of clear and convincing evidence, that does not mean that the court believes the patent should have been granted in the first place. And if an appellate cour...
Deference presents one of the greatest threats to liberalism in the modern age, undermining judicial...
Although the labels have changed, the name of the appellate game is still the same. For any given ty...
The Supreme Court follows the Doctrine of Stare Decisis, of which dictates that the Court must follo...
This Article begins with what should seem a relatively straightforward proposition: it is impossible...
Deference — the substitution by a decisionmaker of someone else\u27s judgment for its own — is a per...
This Article examines the Federal Circuit\u27s review of claim constructions by lower tribunals to d...
Deference is perhaps the most important concept and practice in law. It lies at the core of every sy...
One of the most common defenses that an accused infringer raises in a patent infringement lawsuit is...
This Article analyzes patent mistakes-that is, mistakes made by the patent system when it decides wh...
Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc. (Markman II) concluded that patent claim construction is excl...
Under most accounts of appellate review, error correction stands with law declaration as the core pu...
Mistakes matter in law, even the smallest ones. What would happen if a small but substantively meani...
This Article explores the question of how much appellate deference is due to “legislative” facts, or...
Normally, if a defendant fails to make a timely objection to a perceived error during trial, he forf...
Patent scope plays a central role in the operation of the patent system, making patent claim constru...
Deference presents one of the greatest threats to liberalism in the modern age, undermining judicial...
Although the labels have changed, the name of the appellate game is still the same. For any given ty...
The Supreme Court follows the Doctrine of Stare Decisis, of which dictates that the Court must follo...
This Article begins with what should seem a relatively straightforward proposition: it is impossible...
Deference — the substitution by a decisionmaker of someone else\u27s judgment for its own — is a per...
This Article examines the Federal Circuit\u27s review of claim constructions by lower tribunals to d...
Deference is perhaps the most important concept and practice in law. It lies at the core of every sy...
One of the most common defenses that an accused infringer raises in a patent infringement lawsuit is...
This Article analyzes patent mistakes-that is, mistakes made by the patent system when it decides wh...
Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc. (Markman II) concluded that patent claim construction is excl...
Under most accounts of appellate review, error correction stands with law declaration as the core pu...
Mistakes matter in law, even the smallest ones. What would happen if a small but substantively meani...
This Article explores the question of how much appellate deference is due to “legislative” facts, or...
Normally, if a defendant fails to make a timely objection to a perceived error during trial, he forf...
Patent scope plays a central role in the operation of the patent system, making patent claim constru...
Deference presents one of the greatest threats to liberalism in the modern age, undermining judicial...
Although the labels have changed, the name of the appellate game is still the same. For any given ty...
The Supreme Court follows the Doctrine of Stare Decisis, of which dictates that the Court must follo...