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Home Is Where The Hq Is: Corporate Citizenship Following The Supreme Court's Decision In Hertz V. Friend, Sean-Patrick Wilson, Keena M. Hausmann, Paul A. Rosenthal Mar 2010

Home Is Where The Hq Is: Corporate Citizenship Following The Supreme Court's Decision In Hertz V. Friend, Sean-Patrick Wilson, Keena M. Hausmann, Paul A. Rosenthal

Sean-Patrick Wilson

On February 23, 2010, the United States Supreme Court released its decision in the case of Hertz Corp. v. Friend, 559 U.S. ___ (2010), no. 08-1107 (“Hertz”). Th Hertz case represents the only time the Supreme Court has addressed the question of where a business’s “principal place of business” is located for purposes of determining diversity jurisdiction. The Court’s ruling is certain to have significant ramifications for American corporations, as it determines when corporations can be sued in federal court (as they might prefer), or in plaintiff-friendly state courts. As the most authoritative case discussing diversity jurisdiction for corporations today, …


Judging Cercla: An Empirical Analysis Of Circuit Court Decision-Making, Clifford Chad Henson Jan 2010

Judging Cercla: An Empirical Analysis Of Circuit Court Decision-Making, Clifford Chad Henson

Clifford Chad Henson

Abstract: Political scientists, and increasingly legal scholars, have become skeptical of judges’ attempts to explain decisions based exclusively on applying fact to law, and have attempted to identify factors that influence judicial decision-making. This study isolates a set of cases dealing with the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 and identifies variable sets corresponding to factors one would expect to be significant under competing models of judicial decision-making. While both the legal and extra-legal model independently explain some judicial decision-making, the legal model has more explanatory power and adds significantly to the explanatory power of the extra-legal …