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In the Grable & Sons Metal Products Inc. v. Darue Engineering & Manufacturing case, the US Supreme Court held that the national interest in providing a federal forum for federal tax litigation is sufficiently substantial to support the exercise of federal-question jurisdiction over the disputed issue on removal.
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...Removal Based on Federal Question Jurisdiction C. Practical Reasons To Remo...
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...Respondents removed the action to federal court, contending that federal-question jurisdicti...3d 362, that removal was properly predicated on the preclusive effect o...
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... of the United States Code concerning the removal to federal court of lawsuits initially commenced i... Removal on Federal-Question Grounds. For federal-question removal cases, the...
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... . That the Framers did not intend for federal judges to roam at large in construing the Constitu... limit the business of federal courts to questions presented in an adversary context and in a form hi... . Removal From State Court to Federal Court .-A limited righ...
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... state law claims do not prevent federal question removal. The Act amends the removal standard in ca...
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... state law claims do not prevent federal question removal. The Act amends the removal standard in ca...
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... Rodas's appeal presents an important question about the meaning of a provision of the Illinois G... federal court under the federal officer removal statute, 28U.S.C. § 1442. The state-law question ...
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... had jurisdiction over the tribal tort and federal civil rights claims, and the Tribal Appeals Court ...This case presents the question whether a tribal court may assert jurisdiction ove..., because the general federal-question removal statute refers only to removal from state court,...
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§ 17.1 Foundations of . § 17.1.1 The Nature and Basis of . § 17.1.2 During the Original Natural Law Era: 1789-1873. § 17.1.2.1 Marbury v. Madison versus the Tripartite Theory of . § 17.1.2.2 Martin v. Hunter's Lessee and Federal Court Supremacy. § 17.1.3.1 During the Formalist Era: 1873-1937. § 17.1.3.2 During the Holmesian Era: 1937-1954. § 17.1.3.3 During the Instrumentalist Era: 1954-1986. § 17.1.3.4 During the Modern Natural Law Era: 1986-Today. § 17.1.4 Evaluation of . § 17.2 The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts. § 17.2.1 Federal Jurisdiction: What Article III Provides. § 17.2.2 Types of Cases for Which Federal Jurisdiction Exists. § 17.2.2.1...
... § 15.4.1 nn.50-59, does not answer the question of whether they endorsed judicial review. As Profe...§ 17.2.2.4 Jurisdiction Acquired by Removal of Cases from State Courts. Under 28 U.S.C. § 144...