Thursday round-up

Yesterday the Court issued opinions in two argued cases.  In T-Mobile South v. City of Roswell, it held that a federal law providing that a local government’s denial of an application to build a cell phone tower “shall be in writing and supported by substantial evidence” requires the locality to provide such reasons in writing.  Coverage of that decision comes from Jess Bravin of The Wall Street Journal, Michael Bobelian of Forbes, and Taylor Gillan of JURIST.

In its second decision, in Jennings v. Stephens, the Court held that a prisoner who sought federal habeas relief based on three theories and prevailed in the district court on two of them does not have to file a cross-appeal or seek a certificate of appealability on the third theory to rely on it as part of his defense against the state’s appeal.  Coverage of the decision comes from Julie Deisher-Edwards of JURIST, with commentary from Kent Scheidegger at Crime and Consequences.

The Court heard oral arguments yesterday in the immigration case Mellouli v. Holder.  Coverage of that oral argument comes from Nina Totenberg of NPR, who reports that the “question before the justices boiled down to whether a sock can be considered drug paraphernalia,” while Julie Deisher-Edwards of JURIST briefly covers both of yesterday’s arguments.  At ISCOTUSnow, Edward Lee predicts the winners of yesterday’s oral arguments based on the number of questions from the Justices for each side.  And in a second post at Crime and Consequences, Kent Scheidegger observes that, although Lee’s methodology provides “a strong correlation as these things go,” yesterday’s decision in Jennings demonstrates that “correlation is not certainty.”

On Friday the Court is again scheduled to consider the petitions challenging bans on same-sex marriage in Tennessee, Ohio, Michigan, and Kentucky.  At BuzzFeed, Chris Geidner has a guide to the cases, while in an essay at the Michigan Journal of Law Reform’s online edition Carl Tobias urges the Court to “clarify marriage equality by reviewing” the Sixth Circuit’s decision upholding those bans this Term.

Briefly:

 [Disclosure:  Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys contribute to this blog in various capacities, is among the counsel to the petitioner in Mach Mining.  However, I am not affiliated with the firm.]

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