1st Circuit (incl. bankruptcy)

The First Circuit Court of Appeals  is comprised of four states in the Northeastern portion of the United States, Maine, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, and Puerto Rico. In this federal district there are a total of 25 courthouses which fall into the First Circuit’s jurisdiction. These courthouses hear cases which fall under the jurisdiction of federal-level (non-state issues) or cases which are on appeal at the federal districts of each state in the circuit.

Aside from cases heard on appeal from each federal circuit-state (US Territory), certain cases might also be left to the federal circuit if a state or region doesn’t have proper jurisdiction to hear those cases. Possible reasons cases might go directly to the appellate level include: cases where a state-court doesn’t have personal or subject-matter jurisdiction over the parties, criminal cases, or other “special” cases, which bypass the lower level state courts, and are initially heard at the appellate level.

The United States Court of Appeals in the First Circuit is the federal-court system which has appellate jurisdiction over cases which are heard in the 5-federal districts. The main courthouse is the John Joseph Moakley Federal Courthouse, in Boston, Massachusetts. Cases are heard in the courthouse one week out of each month of the year, except for one month (either July or August) when the courthouse is closed.

One week in March or November, the main federal circuit court sits in  Jose V. Toledo Federal Building and United States Courthouse, which is in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico. Certain times of the year, cases are heard in one of the other 23-courthouses, which fall under the First Circuit-jurisdictional power to hear those cases.

The First Circuit is the smallest of the Federal US Circuit Courts. It currently has six active judges along with three senior judges presiding over cases which go through the federal circuit. Seats in the federal circuit are appointed in the order which judges were appointed to the federal system, and numbered in order the vacancies were filled. Jeffrey R. Howard is currently the chief justice in the First Circuit.

Notable First Circuit cases include Glik v. Cunniffe (2011), where the court decided a private-citizen had the right to record public officials in a public forum.

The National Law Review covers bankruptcy, civil lawsuits, criminal cases at the federal level, and general news-coverage which goes through the court-system. There are legal articles on judge appointments, appeals, and emerging news in the circuit court system published on The National Law Review Website.

Custom text Title Sort ascending Organization
Nov
17
2021
Tricky Issues of Appellate Procedure: Timeliness and Cross-Appeals Edition Pierce Atwood LLP
May
15
2023
Tradition! Tradition! Tradition!: Mail and Wire Fraud Prosecution Theories Must Be Grounded in Traditional Concepts of Property Blank Rome LLP
Jan
31
2017
Trademarks, Trade Names Not Protected by Bankruptcy Law, but Licensee Rights Prevail McDermott Will & Emery
Feb
4
2013
Trade Secret Misappropriation: When An Insider Takes Your Trade Secrets With Them Raymond Law Group LLC
Sep
2
2016
Tracking Brain Tsunamis in TBI Patients Stark & Stark
Dec
22
2020
Top Five Labor Law Developments for November 2020 Jackson Lewis P.C.
Jun
20
2016
Together or Separate? When Paying for a Client Dinner Can Mean Federal Prison Polsinelli PC
Jun
29
2018
Tobacco Product Listing Update Due by June 30, 2018 for U.S. Manufacturing Establishments Keller and Heckman LLP
Apr
17
2016
Three’s a Trend: First Circuit’s Santana-Diaz Decision Joins Third and Sixth Circuits to Require Notice of an ERISA Plan’s Time Limit for Filing Suit in Final Claim Denial Letter Armstrong Teasdale
Apr
29
2020
Three Strikes and the EPA’s Scientist Advisory Committees Directive May Be Out ArentFox Schiff LLP
Jan
27
2017
Three Key Employee Benefit Plan Issues for Health Systems in 2017 McDermott Will & Emery
Jan
25
2023
This NIMBY Lawsuit Is Doomed but That Doesn't Mean that It Won't Cause Considerable Harm Before It Dies Mintz
May
2
2022
This 1st Circuit Clean Water Act Decision Makes Complete Sense Except in The Real World Mintz
Mar
19
2020
There’s Always One: Court Concludes Texts in Response to a Consumer’s Request for Information Might be Telemarketing Troutman Amin, LLP
Jan
24
2024
The VPPA (Video Privacy Protection Act) Class Action – Is this Tide Still Coming in? Or Going Out? Polsinelli PC
Sep
23
2020
The US First, Fifth, and Sixth Circuits Render Recent Decisions That Analyze the Enforceability of Restrictive Covenants in Employment Agreements, Teaching Employers Some Valuable Lessons Jones Walker LLP
Jun
26
2022
The Supreme Court Denies Petition Challenging CMS’s Overpayment Rule Proskauer Rose LLP
Oct
7
2014
The Supreme Court Continues to Punt on False Claims Cases Mintz
Mar
10
2015
The Remicade Biosimilar Patent Dispute Foley & Lardner LLP
Jan
9
2018
The Pendulum Continues To Swing On The Scope Of IPR Estoppel Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP
Dec
21
2021
THE OTHER SHOE DROPS: Court Refuses to Dismiss TCPA ATDS Claim Because Dialing Sequence Determined by RoSNG Troutman Amin, LLP
Aug
23
2022
The Opportunity To Fail Mintz
Dec
15
2020
The Massachusetts Statute of Repose Comes Marching One Building at a Time Pierce Atwood LLP
Dec
2
2019
The Massachusetts Paid Family Leave Self-Funded Private Plan Exemption – What We Know Now Mintz
Jul
13
2020
The Massachusetts Consumer Protection Act/ Chapter 93A Newsletter | Summer 2020 Greenberg Traurig, LLP
Nov
2
2020
The Jury Returns to D. Mass. McDermott Will & Emery
Feb
21
2024
The Judge's Decision Vacating EPA's Approval of Florida's "Dredge and Fill" Permit Authority Has Serious Implications for our Renewable Energy Future Mintz
Mar
23
2015
The Honorable Engagement Clause and Flexibility In Arbitration Award Relief Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP
Jul
13
2023
The Game of Life: Winner Gets Everything Except Attorneys’ Fees McDermott Will & Emery
Nov
24
2014
The FTC Amends Its Guides For Advertising Payments and Services Greenberg Traurig, LLP
Dec
2
2013
The First Circuit’s Sun Capital Decision: Much Ado About Nothing? Mintz
Feb
12
2018
The First Circuit Casts a Shadow on Sunbeam Mintz
Apr
2
2016
The First Circuit Agrees that Non-Cash Reverse Payments Are Subject to Antitrust Scrutiny. Does the Loestrin Decision Point to Battles to Come? Proskauer Rose LLP
Aug
25
2023
The Federal Government Says The 6th Circuit and 1st Circuit Now Have Different Superfund Rules But The Supreme Court Shouldn't Do Anything About That! Mintz
Aug
23
2022
The Dormant Commerce Clause and Discrimination in Illegal Interstate Markets Pierce Atwood LLP
 

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