{"database": "openregs", "table": "crs_reports", "rows": [["LSB11434", "Civil Procedure at the Supreme Court: Selected Cases from the October 2025 Term", "2026-05-28T04:00:00Z", "2026-05-29T14:54:33Z", "Active", "Posts", "Joanna R. Lampe", null, "During the October 2025 Term to date, the Supreme Court has considered multiple cases focused on procedural issues. Among them, as discussed in order below, are cases about the relationship between federal and state procedural rules, the timing of motions for relief from judgment, federal court diversity jurisdiction, sovereign immunity, removal of cases from state to federal court, and constitutional requirements related to standing to sue.\nCongress has the power to enact legislation to regulate proceedings in federal courts. Thus, these cases may be of interest to Congress because Congress could amend the specific statutes or rules at issue in these cases or could look to the rulings as guidance on how the Court might interpret related legislation in the future. This Legal Sidebar provides an overview of seven civil procedure cases from the Supreme Court\u2019s October 2025 term, listed chronologically by date of decision, then briefly discusses related considerations for Congress.\nBerk v. Choy\nIn Berk v. Choy, the Supreme Court held that a state law\u2014Delaware\u2019s law requiring that medical malpractice complaints must be dismissed unless accompanied by expert affidavits\u2014cannot apply in federal court because it conflicts with a valid federal procedural rule.\nFederal courts hearing cases involving state law claims between parties from different states, known as diversity cases, apply federal procedural law and state substantive law, \u201cexcept where the Constitution or treaties of the United States or Acts of Congress otherwise require or provide.\u201d After suffering complications from an ankle fracture, plaintiff-petitioner Harold R. Berk filed a medical negligence complaint in Delaware federal court against the treating physician and his employer. Under Delaware law, a plaintiff filing a medical malpractice claim must include an affidavit from a qualified expert stating that \u201cthere are reasonable grounds to believe that there has been health-care medical negligence committed by each defendant.\u201d Berk was unable to comply with the affidavit requirement, and the district court dismissed the case. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (Third Circuit) affirmed the dismissal, holding that the affidavit requirement is substantive rather than procedural.\nThe Supreme Court granted Berk\u2019s petition for a writ of certiorari, held oral argument in the case on October 6, 2025, and issued a decision on January 20, 2026. With Justice Barrett writing for an eight-Justice majority, the Court reversed the Third Circuit. It held that the Delaware affidavit requirement cannot apply in federal court because it conflicts with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (FRCP) 8, which requires that a complaint contain \u201ca short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief\u201d and thus \u201cestablishes implicitly, but with unmistakable clarity,\u2019 . . . that evidence of the claim is not required.\u201d It further held that FRCP 12 \u201creinforces the point\u201d by prohibiting federal courts from considering \u201cmatters outside the pleadings\u201d when ruling on motions to dismiss. In so ruling, the Court reaffirmed a prior holding that it does not matter if a displaced state law is substantive, as long as the federal law that conflicts with it is procedural, as FRCP 8 is.\nJustice Jackson concurred in the judgment. She agreed with the majority that the affidavit requirement conflicts with federal law but wrote separately to argue that it conflicts with FRCP 3, governing when a civil action is deemed to be \u201ccommenced,\u201d and FRCP 12, governing grounds for dismissal, not FRCP 8.\nConey Island Auto Parts Unlimited v. Burton\nConey Island Auto Parts Unlimited v. Burton concerned the timing of motions for relief from judgment under FRCP 60. The Court held that the requirement in FRCP 60(c)(1) that parties make motions within a \u201creasonable time\u201d applies to a motion to set aside a default judgment that is void for lack of personal jurisdiction pursuant to FRCP 60(b)(4).\nIn 2014, Coney Island Auto Parts Unlimited (Coney Island) was subject to an adversarial proceeding in bankruptcy court for unpaid invoices. Coney Island allegedly received insufficient service of process and did not appear in the adversarial proceeding, and a default judgment was entered against it. In 2021, following other attempts to collect, a marshal seized funds from Coney Island\u2019s bank account to satisfy the default judgment. Coney Island then filed an FRCP 60(b) motion in the bankruptcy court, arguing the failure of service rendered the default judgment void. The bankruptcy court denied the motion, holding that Coney Island failed to bring it within a \u201creasonable time,\u201d and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit (Sixth Circuit) affirmed.\nThe Supreme Court granted certiorari and held oral argument in the case on November 4, 2025. In a January 20, 2026, opinion authored by Justice Alito and joined by seven other Justices, the Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the Sixth Circuit. The Court explained that several other appeals courts had held that the \u201creasonable time\u201d requirement did not apply to motions alleging that a judgment is void because a \u201cvoid judgment is a legal nullity,\u201d but rejected that interpretation as contrary to the text of FRCP 60 and lacking a limiting principle that would prevent parties from alleging vagueness at any time. While agreeing that \u201cthe passage of time cannot cure voidness,\u201d the majority stated that this is true of many types of legal errors, but statutes and rules routinely impose time limits for correcting such errors. To avoid application of the time limit, a party would need to \u201cshow that some principle of law, such as the Due Process Clause, gives a party the right to allege voidness at any time.\u201d Coney Island had not attempted to make that argument, and the Court stated that it would be \u201chard to accept.\u201d The Court also rejected arguments made by Coney Island that were rooted in historical practice, policy concerns, FRCP 60\u2019s drafting history, and the canon of constitutional avoidance, concluding that those interpretive tools did not carry weight where, as here, the rule\u2019s language is unambiguous.\nJustice Sotomayor concurred in the judgment, objecting that the majority \u201cunnecessarily opines on the potential validity of a constitutional challenge to the reasonable time\u2019 limit under the Due Process Clause.\u201d\nHain Celestial Group v. Palmquist\nIn Hain Celestial Group v. Palmquist, the Supreme Court held that a district court\u2019s final judgment must be vacated if it is later determined that the court improperly exercised diversity jurisdiction after erroneously dismissing a nondiverse party.\nPlaintiffs-respondents Sarah and Grant Palmquist sued the Hain Celestial Group (Hain) and Whole Foods Market, Inc. (Whole Foods) in Texas state court, alleging that their child was injured by toxic heavy metals in baby food produced by Hain and sold at Whole Foods. Hain removed the case to federal court based on diversity of citizenship. As background, the Constitution grants federal courts limited jurisdiction over specified classes of cases and controversies, including diversity cases between parties from different states. Federal court diversity jurisdiction is also defined in a statute, 28 U.S.C. \u00a7 1332, which has been interpreted to require complete diversity of citizenship\u2014that is, no defendant may be from the same state as any plaintiff. At the time of removal, the parties in Hain were not completely diverse because the Palmquists and Whole Foods were citizens of Texas. However, Hain argued that Whole Foods had been improperly joined and should be dismissed as a defendant. The district court agreed. After dismissing Whole Foods, the court exercised diversity jurisdiction over the case and ultimately granted Hain\u2019s motion for judgment as a matter of law on all claims. The Palmquists appealed, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (Fifth Circuit) reversed, holding that Whole Foods was properly joined, so the district court lacked diversity jurisdiction and the judgment must be vacated.\nThe Supreme Court granted Hain and Whole Foods\u2019 petition for a writ of certiorari, held oral argument in the case on November 4, 2025, and issued a decision on February 24, 2026. Writing for the unanimous Court, Justice Sotomayor explained that an appellate court must generally vacate a district court\u2019s judgment if the district court lacked jurisdiction at the time a case was filed, unless the district court \u201ccures\u201d a jurisdictional defect prior to final judgment. While the Supreme Court had previously held that the dismissal of a nondiverse defendant can cure a jurisdictional defect, the Court in Hain held that the erroneous dismissal of a nondiverse defendant cannot do so. Because diversity jurisdiction did not exist at the time of removal and \u201cthe jurisdictional defect lingered through judgment,\u201d the Court held that the district court\u2019s judgment must be vacated.\nJustice Thomas joined the majority opinion in full and wrote a separate concurrence to express his \u201cskepticism of the doctrine of improper joinder,\u2019\u201d which he said \u201cappears to allow federal courts to enlarge their jurisdiction by assessing the merits of claims over which they lack jurisdiction.\u201d\nThe GEO Group v. Menocal\nIn The GEO Group v. Menocal, the Court held that an order denying a government contractor\u2019s claim of derivative sovereign immunity is not immediately appealable under the collateral-order doctrine.\nIn the 1940 case Yearsley v. W. A. Ross Constr. Co., the Supreme Court held that a federal contractor cannot be held liable for conduct that the government has lawfully \u201cauthorized and directed\u201d the contractor to perform. Defendant-petitioner GEO Group (GEO) operates a private detention facility under a contract with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Plaintiff-respondent Alejandro Menocal was detained in the facility in 2014 and later filed a class action on behalf of himself and other detainees challenging certain policies under which detainees performed work such as cooking and cleaning within the facility. GEO moved to dismiss under Yearsley, arguing that its contract with ICE \u201cauthorized and directed\u201d it to implement the challenged policies. The district court denied the motion, allowing the case to proceed to trial. GEO filed an immediate appeal challenging the denial of the motion to dismiss, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit (Tenth Circuit) dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction, holding that the denial of dismissal was an unappealable nonfinal order.\nThe Supreme Court granted GEO\u2019s petition for certiorari, held oral argument in the case on November 10, 2025, and issued a decision on February 25, 2026, affirming the judgment of the Tenth Circuit and remanding for further proceedings. Justice Kagan authored the majority opinion, which six other Justices joined in full and Justice Thomas joined in part. In general, federal appeals courts possess jurisdiction over final orders of district courts that fully resolve the cases in question. Under a line of cases beginning with Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp., however, a small class of nonfinal \u201ccollateral orders\u201d are immediately appealable if they \u201c(1) conclusively determine the disputed question, (2) resolve an important issue completely separate from the merits of the action, and (3) [are] effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.\u201d For claims like GEO\u2019s, the Court opined, the analysis hinges on \u201cwhether the defendant has asserted a defense to liability\u201d on the merits, which could properly be evaluated at trial, \u201cor instead an immunity from suit,\u201d which would entail a right not to go to trial at all. Concluding that Yearsley immunity is a defense on the merits because it depends on the legality of the defendant\u2019s conduct, the Court held that the case failed the third prong of the Cohen test because any error could be effectively corrected on appeal, so the denial of dismissal was not immediately appealable.\nJustice Thomas concurred in part and concurred in the judgment. He wrote separately to argue that \u201c[t]he Cohen collateral-order doctrine, which allows federal courts to exercise appellate jurisdiction over certain interlocutory orders, conflicts with Congress\u2019s authority over federal appellate jurisdiction.\u201d Justice Alito concurred in the judgment, but would instead have held that the denial of dismissal was unappealable because \u201cpostponing appellate review of Yearsley issues until final judgment would not imperil important constitutional or public-policy interests.\u201d\nChevron USA Inc. v. Plaquemines Parish\nIn Chevron USA Inc. v. Plaquemines Parish, the Supreme Court held that a case against a corporation could be removed from state to federal court under 28 U.S.C. \u00a7 1442(a)(1), which, in relevant part, allows removal if a suit \u201cis against or directed to . . . any officer (or any person acting under that officer) of the United States or of any agency thereof . . . relating to any act under color of such office.\u201d\nDuring World War II, a predecessor of Chevron USA, Inc. (Chevron), entered into a contract with the United States to refine aviation gasoline (avgas). Some crude oil that Chevron produced in Plaquemines Parish, LA, was used to produce avgas subject to the contract. In 1978, Louisiana enacted the State and Local Coastal Resources Management Act, which prohibits certain uses of Louisiana\u2019s coastal zone, including oil production, unless the user first obtains a permit. The act exempts from the permit requirement \u201c[i]ndividual specific uses legally commenced or established prior to the effective date of the coastal use permit program.\u201d\nIn 2013, several Louisiana parishes filed multiple suits in Louisiana state court against Chevron and other oil and gas companies, alleging that the companies lacked permits for their use of the coastal zone and that some of their activities that began before the permit program took effect were illegally commenced and thus not eligible for the exception to the permit requirement. With respect to Chevron, the parishes filed an expert witness report identifying certain allegedly illegal activities related to oil production during World War II. Chevron removed the suit against it to federal court, arguing that the suit pertained to its duties to refine avgas during the war. The district court rejected that argument and remanded the case to state court. The Fifth Circuit affirmed, holding that while Chevron did \u201cact[ ] under\u201d a federal officer, it had not shown that that the suit was \u201cfor or relating to\u201d those acts.\nThe Supreme Court granted Chevron\u2019s petition for a writ of certiorari, held oral argument in the case on January 12, 2026, and issued a decision on April 17, 2026. Justice Thomas authored the majority opinion joined by six other Justices (Justice Alito did not participate in the case). Before the Supreme Court, it was undisputed that Chevron had \u201cact[ed] under\u201d a federal officer. The only question was whether the suit was \u201cfor or relating to\u201d the company\u2019s wartime production of crude oil and avgas pursuant to its contract with the government. The Court held that \u201cChevron\u2019s wartime crude-oil production was closely connected to its wartime avgas refining, so the parish\u2019s suit challenging that crude-oil production relates to that refining.\u201d Explaining that \u201ca removing defendant need not show that his federal duties specifically required or strictly caused the challenged conduct,\u201d and rejecting the contention that the suit was insufficiently related to the government contract because \u201cChevron\u2019s refining contract did not specify how to obtain or produce crude oil,\u201d the Court held that the case was removable because \u201cChevron has plausibly alleged a close relationship between its challenged conduct and the performance of its federal duties\u2014not a tenuous, remote, or peripheral one.\u201d\nJustice Jackson argued for a \u201ccausal nexus between the targeted conduct and the federal duties\u201d but concurred in the judgment saying Chevron satisfied that more stringent standard.\nEnbridge Energy, LP v. Nessel\nIn Enbridge Energy, LP v. Nessel, the Supreme Court considered another removal statute, 28 U.S.C. \u00a7 1446(b)(1), and held that the deadline for removal under that statute was not subject to equitable tolling.\nSeveral federal statutes specify the circumstances in which cases filed in state court may be removed to federal court, and 28 U.S.C. \u00a7 1446 lays out the procedures that apply to such removals. Among other things, and subject to several exceptions, Section 1446 provides that a notice of removal must be filed within 30 days after the defendant receives notice of a suit.\nEnbridge Energy LP and two affiliates (collectively, Enbridge) operate an oil and gas pipeline that runs through Michigan. In 2019, the Michigan Attorney General sued Enbridge in Michigan state court, arguing that Enbridge\u2019s operation of the pipeline violated state law. The Attorney General served Enbridge with the complaint on July 12, 2019, and Enbridge initially litigated the case in state court, arguing, among other things, that the Attorney General\u2019s state-law claims were preempted by federal law. In 2020, the Governor of Michigan filed an additional state-court suit against Enbridge. Enbridge removed that case to federal court, and the parties agreed to hold the Attorney General\u2019s suit in abeyance pending disposition of the Governor\u2019s suit. The district court denied the Governor\u2019s motion to remand to state court, and the Governor ultimately voluntarily dismissed her suit. On December 15, 2021, 887 days after the company received the Attorney General\u2019s complaint, Enbridge removed the Attorney General\u2019s suit to federal court. The Attorney General moved to remand to state court, and the district court denied the motion. On appeal, the Sixth Circuit reversed, holding that Enbridge had missed the deadline for removal and the deadline in Section 1446(b) could not be extended via equitable tolling.\nThe Supreme Court granted Enbridge\u2019s petition for certiorari, held oral argument in the case on February 24, 2026, and issued a decision on April 22, 2026. In a unanimous opinion by Justice Sotomayor, the Court affirmed the holding that courts cannot equitably toll the deadline for removal in Section 1446(b). The Court first held that the removal deadline in Section 1446(b) was not jurisdictional, meaning that it could potentially be subject to equitable exceptions, and assumed that the provision functioned as a statute of limitations, meaning that there was a presumption that it was subject to equitable tolling. The Court held, however, that such tolling was unavailable in light of the text and structure of Section 1446(b), the broader statutory scheme governing removal, and the fact that allowing tolling would undermine Congress\u2019s goal of resolving removal issues early in litigation.\nFirst Choice Women\u2019s Resource Centers, Inc. v. Davenport\nIn First Choice Women's Resource Centers, Inc. v. Davenport, the Supreme Court held that a nonprofit organization has standing to bring a federal-court challenge to a subpoena seeking information about its donors.\nFirst Choice Women\u2019s Resource Centers, Inc. (First Choice) is a nonprofit that operates \u201cfaith-based pregnancy centers\u201d with a \u201cpro-life mission.\u201d First Choice does not perform or provide referrals for abortions. In 2022, citing concerns that pregnancy centers like First Choice\u2019s might have misled visitors or donors, New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin issued a subpoena to First Choice seeking, among other things, the names and contact information of many individuals who had made donations to First Choice. (Platkin was the original defendant in the federal court litigation. In 2026, Jennifer Davenport succeeded Platkin as the state\u2019s Attorney General and was substituted as the respondent in the Supreme Court case. This Legal Sidebar refers to both incumbents as the \u201cAttorney General.\u201d)\nFirst Choice concurrently opposed the subpoena in state court and filed suit in federal district court pursuant to 42 U.S.C. \u00a7 1983 (Section 1983). In federal court, the organization argued that the subpoena violated its First Amendment right to free association and moved for a preliminary injunction barring enforcement of the subpoena. The district court twice denied the motion for an injunction and dismissed First Choice\u2019s complaint, holding that the dispute was not ripe for adjudication in federal court. A divided panel of the Third Circuit affirmed the second dismissal, holding that First Choice\u2019s claims were not ripe because the organization did \u201cnot yet show enough of an injury.\u201d The majority further stated, \u201cWe believe that the state court will adequately adjudicate First Choice\u2019s constitutional claims, and we expect that any future federal litigation between these parties would likewise adequately adjudicate them.\u201d The Supreme Court then granted First Choice\u2019s petition for a writ of certiorari. The Court held oral argument on December 2, 2025. The United States filed an amicus curiae brief in support of First Choice and also participated in oral argument as amicus curiae.\nThe Supreme Court issued its decision in First Choice on April 29, 2026. Justice Gorsuch authored the opinion of the unanimous Court, holding that the Attorney General\u2019s subpoena itself caused First Choice an injury in fact sufficient to establish Article III standing. The Court relied on cases including its 1958 decision in NAACP v. Alabama ex rel. Patterson, in which it held that \u201ccompelled disclosure of affiliation with groups engaged in advocacy\u201d can \u201cconstitute a[n] effective . . . restraint on freedom of association.\u201d \u201cAgainst this backdrop,\u201d the Court held, \u201cthe question before us all but answers itself. First Choice has established a present injury to its First Amendment associational rights.\u201d It explained that an injury in fact need not be \u201ca tangible harm to a plaintiff, like a physical injury or monetary loss. It can also arise when a defendant burdens a plaintiff\u2019s constitutional rights. . . . And our cases have long recognized that demands for a charity\u2019s private member or donor information have just that effect.\u201d Having so held, the Court declined to address First Choice\u2019s alternative argument that it faced an imminent future injury because there was a credible threat that the Attorney General would seek to enforce the subpoena in state court if the group failed to comply.\nConsiderations for Congress\nIn addition to the foregoing cases, other matters from the Supreme Court\u2019s October 2025 term raise questions related to federal court jurisdiction and procedures. In Jules v. Andre Balazs Properties, the Court is considering the jurisdiction of federal courts to confirm or vacate certain arbitration proceedings. In T. M. v. University of Maryland Medical System Corp., the Court is considering whether the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, which prohibits federal district courts from reviewing final decisions of state courts, also prohibits review of a state-court decision that remains subject to further state-court review. As discussed in another Legal Sidebar, this term and recent terms have generated discussion around the Court\u2019s nonmerits docket, particularly the Court\u2019s handling of requests for emergency relief.\nGenerally, Congress has substantial authority to regulate federal court jurisdiction and procedures, subject to some constitutional limits. More specifically, procedural rules for the lower federal courts are generally set by the Supreme Court, subject to review by Congress, but Congress can also directly amend the rules via legislation. Thus, Congress could amend the FRCP at issue in the cases discussed above. CRS has not identified proposals in the 119th Congress that would amend those specific rules, but there are introduced proposals that would amend FRCP 11, which governs sanctions for misconduct in litigation, and FRCP 23, which governs class actions.\nWith respect to jurisdiction, some grants of federal court jurisdiction and limits on that jurisdiction come directly from the Constitution, but within the applicable constitutional limits, Congress sets the jurisdiction of the federal courts by statute. Thus, because the Court\u2019s decision in First Choice rested on interpretation of Article III, Congress could not directly overturn that holding by legislation (nor could Congress legislate to alter the First Amendment principles at issue in the underlying litigation). However, Congress could amend Section 1983, the federal statute that provides a cause of action for violations of constitutional rights such as those alleged by First Choice. Congress could also amend the diversity jurisdiction statute\u201428 U.S.C. \u00a7 1332\u2014or the federal removal statutes.", "https://www.congress.gov/crs_external_products/LSB/PDF/LSB11434/LSB11434.1.pdf", "https://www.congress.gov/crs_external_products/LSB/HTML/LSB11434.html"]], "columns": ["id", "title", "publish_date", "update_date", "status", "content_type", "authors", "topics", "summary", "pdf_url", "html_url"], "primary_keys": ["id"], "primary_key_values": ["LSB11434"], "units": {}, "query_ms": 0.3722990077221766, "source": "Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API", "source_url": "https://www.federalregister.gov/developers/api/v1", "license": "Public Domain (U.S. Government data)", "license_url": "https://www.regulations.gov/faq"}