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List of United States Supreme Court cases, volume 584
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This is a list of all the United States Supreme Court cases from volume 584 of the United States Reports:
- Note: As of July 2025,[update] final bound volumes for the U.S. Supreme Court's United States Reports have been published through volume 582 (June 2017). Newer cases from subsequent future volumes do not yet have official page numbers and typically use three underscores in place of the page number; e.g., Example v. United States, 700 U.S. ___ (2050).
More information Case name, Docket no. ...
Case name | Docket no. | Date decided |
---|---|---|
Marinello v. United States | 16–1144 | March 21, 2018 |
To convict a defendant under the Internal Revenue Code's Omnibus Clause, the Government must prove the defendant was aware of a pending tax-related proceeding, such as a particular investigation or audit, or could reasonably foresee that such a proceeding would commence. | ||
Ayestas v. Davis | 16–6795 | March 21, 2018 |
An ex parte decision by a judge can still be judicial in nature. | ||
Hall v. Hall | 16–1150 | March 27, 2018 |
When one of several cases consolidated under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 42(a) is finally decided, that decision confers upon the losing party the immediate right to appeal, regardless of whether any of the other consolidated cases remain pending. | ||
Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro | 16–1362 | April 2, 2018 |
Automotive service advisors are considered exempt from overtime pay under the Fair Labor Standards Act, reversing the decision of the Ninth Circuit | ||
Kisela v. Hughes | 17–467 | April 2, 2018 |
The officer was entitled to qualified immunity after shooting a person less than one minute into their interaction. | ||
Wilson v. Sellers | 16–6855 | April 17, 2018 |
A federal court sitting in a habeas corpus proceeding should "look through" an unexplained, summary ruling to the last related state-court decision that provides a relevant rationale and presume that the unexplained decision adopted the same reasoning. The State may rebut the presumption by showing that the unexplained decision most likely relied on different grounds than the reasoned decision below. | ||
Sessions v. Dimaya | 15–1498 | April 17, 2018 |
18 U.S.C. § 16(b), a statute defining certain "aggravated felonies", is unconstitutionally vague. | ||
United States v. Microsoft Corp. | 17–2 | April 17, 2018 |
Second Circuit vacated and remanded after the controversy was mooted by passage of the CLOUD Act (March 2018). | ||
Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC | 16–499 | April 24, 2018 |
Foreign corporations may not be sued under the Alien Tort Statute in U.S. courts. | ||
Oil States Energy Services, LLC v. Greene’s Energy Group, LLC | 16–712 | April 24, 2018 |
The inter partes review process granted by Congress to the United States Patent and Trademark Office is constitutional. | ||
SAS Institute Inc. v. Iancu | 16–969 | April 24, 2018 |
The United States Patent and Trademark Office, when conducting an inter partes review, must make judgement on all patent claims contested by the petitioner. | ||
United States v. Sanchez-Gomez | 17–312 | May 14, 2018 |
There is no analog to class actions under the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, and there is no "capable of repetition yet evading review" exception for mootness where repetition would require the defendant to be charged with a crime in the future. | ||
Byrd v. United States | 16–1371 | May 14, 2018 |
Drivers of rental cars have rights protecting them from unconstitutional searches by police, even if the drivers are not listed on the rental agreement. | ||
McCoy v. Louisiana | 16–8255 | May 14, 2018 |
The Sixth Amendment guarantees a defendant the right to choose the objective of his defense and to insist that his counsel refrain from admitting guilt, even when counsel's experienced-based view is that confessing guilt offers the defendant the best chance to avoid the death penalty. | ||
Dahda v. United States | 17–43 | May 14, 2018 |
Because the wiretap orders did not lack any information that the statute required them to include and would have been sufficient absent the superfluous language authorizing interception outside the court's territorial jurisdiction, the orders were not facially insufficient. | ||
Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Association | 16–476 | May 14, 2018 |
The provision of the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act that prohibits state authorization of schemes in sports gambling conflicts with the anticommandeering rule of the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America. | ||
Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis | 16–285 | May 21, 2018 |
Congress has instructed in the Federal Arbitration Act that arbitration agreements providing for individualized proceedings must be enforced and neither saving clause of the Act nor the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 suggests otherwise. | ||
Upper Skagit Tribe v. Lundgren | 17–387 | May 21, 2018 |
Yakima County v. Yakima Nation did not address the scope of Native Nations' sovereign immunity for in rem lawsuits. | ||
Lagos v. United States | 16–1519 | May 29, 2018 |
The words "investigation" and "proceedings" in the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act are limited to government investigations and criminal proceedings and do not include private investigations and civil or bankruptcy proceedings. | ||
Collins v. Virginia | 16–1027 | May 29, 2018 |
The Fourth Amendment's motor vehicle exception for a warrantless search based on reasonable cause does not apply to vehicles stored within a person's home or its curtilage. | ||
City of Hays v. Vogt | 16–1495 | May 29, 2018 |
Dismissed as improvidently granted. | ||
Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission | 16–111 | June 4, 2018 |
By failing to act in a manner neutral to religion, the Colorado Civil Rights Commission violated the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. | ||
Hughes v. United States | 17–155 | June 4, 2018 |
A sentence imposed pursuant to a plea agreement under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(c)(1)(C) is "based on" the defendant's Guidelines range so long as that range was part of the framework the district court relied on in imposing the sentence or accepting the agreement. | ||
Koons v. United States | 17–5716 | June 4, 2018 |
A person who has been sentenced based on a mandatory minimum sentence with a statutory justification for a longer sentence, rather a justification within the Guidelines, is not entitled to sentence reductions under subsequent amendments to the Guidelines. | ||
Lamar, Archer & Cofrin, LLP v. Appling | 16–1215 | June 4, 2018 |
A debtor's statement about a single asset can be a "statement respecting the debtor’s financial condition" under the Bankruptcy Code's exceptions to discharge; therefore, debt associated with a single-asset statement that is not in writing may be discharged. | ||
Azar v. Garza | 17–654 | June 4, 2018 |
Judgment below should be vacated and remanded with a direction to dismiss when a federal civil case has become moot while on its way to the Supreme Court. | ||
China Agritech, Inc. v. Resh | 17–432 | June 11, 2018 |
Upon denial of class certification, a putative class member may not, in lieu of promptly joining an existing suit or promptly filing an individual action, commence a class action anew beyond the time allowed by the applicable statute of limitations. | ||
Husted v. A. Philip Randolph Institute | 16–980 | June 11, 2018 |
Both the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 and the Help America Vote Act of 2002, as prescribed by law in 52 U.S.C. § 20507, permit Ohio to have a list-maintenance process that removes people from the state's on the basis of inactivity. | ||
Sveen v. Melin | 16–1432 | June 11, 2018 |
A law providing that the dissolution or annulment of a marriage revokes any revocable beneficiary designation made by a person to the person's former spouse does not violate the Contracts Clause. | ||
Washington v. United States | 17–269 | June 11, 2018 |
Lower court upheld by divided Court. |
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