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Commerce Clause Interstate Commerce Supreme Court of the United States

Troutman Pepper

Lawsuit Highlights the Complexity of Regulating the Intrastate Use of Marijuana

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One of the most interesting aspects of marijuana law and policy in the U.S. is its tendency to strike at our most foundational democratic principles. In 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court held, in Gonzales v. Raich, that Congress...more

Husch Blackwell LLP

Cannabis Litigation Alert: Commerce Clause Back on Blast

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Recently, the Department of Health and Human Services recommended to the Drug Enforcement Administration that cannabis be rescheduled on the Controlled Substances Act (“CSA”) from a I to a III. At the same time, the SAFER...more

Benesch

Supreme Court Expands General Jurisdiction in Mallory v. Norfolk Southern Railway Co., Marking Departure from “At Home”...

Benesch on

The test for personal jurisdiction, which asks whether a defendant can be compelled to litigate in a particular state, has been extensively developed over the past several decades, and notably refined in the last fifteen...more

Lathrop GPM

Supreme Court Holds Corporation Waived Due Process Rights and Consented to General Personal Jurisdiction by Registering to do...

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On June 27, 2023, the United States Supreme Court held in Mallory v. Norfolk Southern R. Co., No. 21-1168, 2023 WL 4187749, that Norfolk Southern submitted to the state of Pennsylvania’s general jurisdiction (that is, being...more

Beveridge & Diamond PC

Supreme Court Narrows Dormant Commerce Clause Protections Against Regulation of Business in Decision Affirming California Pork Law

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The dormant Commerce Clause is one of the oldest constitutional doctrines, dating to the early 1800s. The Commerce Clause of the Constitution gives Congress the authority to regulate interstate commerce, and the dormant...more

Epstein Becker & Green

A Calm and Prolific Day at the Court, and a Better Day for Criminal Defendants Than for the Second Circuit – SCOTUS Today

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With the Justices largely in agreement across the board, the Court today issued five opinions. One of them provides a usefully definitive view of the limited nature of the so-called “dormant Commerce Clause.” Two of them are...more

Allen Matkins

If California's Pork Law Falls, Will Section 2115 Be Next?

Allen Matkins on

This week, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in National Pork Producers Council v. Ross (Docket No. 21-468).  The case involves a challenge to 2018 proposition that, among other things, forbids the sale of "any...more

Kelley Drye & Warren LLP

Supreme Court’s Review of California’s Proposition 12 Could Have Implications for State Climate, Energy, and Public Health...

On Monday, March 28, 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear industry’s challenge to California’s Proposition 12, a law restricting certain confinement practices in industrial animal agriculture. The case, styled National...more

Dorsey & Whitney LLP

The Supreme Court - June 29, 2021

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Minerva Surgical, Inc. v. Hologic, Inc., No. 20-440: In the late 1990s, Csaba Truckai invented and patented a device to treat abnormal uterine bleeding. Truckai assigned his interest to his company, Novacept, which in turn...more

Morgan Lewis

Pennsylvania Administratively Sets Bright-Line Economic Nexus Threshold for Corporate Net Income Tax

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The Pennsylvania Department of Revenue issued a bulletin announcing its view that the US Supreme Court’s sales and use tax decision in Wayfair v. South Dakota applies equally to corporate net income tax and authorizes the...more

Womble Bond Dickinson

U.S. and Foreign Businesses: You are Now “Virtually” Certain to Have Multistate Tax Obligations

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Executive Summary - After Wayfair, unless Congress intervenes: The physical presence sales tax taxability standard is now gone - at least under circumstances like those presented by South Dakota’s situation. Income...more

Pierce Atwood LLP

Maine Issues Guidance For Remote Sellers

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Maine Revenue Services issued guidance, August 8, 2018, regarding remote sellers’ sales tax collection obligations in light of the Supreme Court’s June 21, 2018 decision in South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc....more

Fox Rothschild LLP

U.S. Supreme Court Removes Tax Advantage For Online Retailers

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In its 5-4 decision in South Dakota v. Wayfair, the U.S. Supreme Court gave states the authority to require online retailers to collect state sales taxes even if the retailer has no physical presence in a state. The decision...more

Mitchell, Williams, Selig, Gates & Woodyard,...

South Dakota v. Wayfair: The Physical Presence Rule - Outdated and Overturned

Just about every State in the U.S. imposes a “sales tax” on the retail sale of goods and services in their State. That sales tax is required to be collected and remitted by the seller of the goods or services; however, if the...more

Fox Rothschild LLP

U.S. Supreme Court Removes Tax Advantage For Online Retailers

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In its 5-4 decision in South Dakota v. Wayfair, the U.S. Supreme Court gave states the authority to require online retailers to collect state sales taxes even if the retailer has no physical presence in a state. The decision...more

Morrison & Foerster LLP

State + Local Tax Insights: Special Edition 2018

Stand Your Ground! Substantial Nexus Lives After Wayfair - The U.S. Supreme Court decided in South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc. that the U.S. Constitution does not require a physical presence in a taxing state in order for...more

McDermott Will & Emery

House Judiciary Committee to Consider Wayfair Decision Impact

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The US House Committee on the Judiciary has scheduled a hearing for Tuesday, July 24 at 10:00 am EDT in 2141 Rayburn House Office Building. According to a press release circulated July 19, the topic of the hearing will be...more

Dickinson Wright

Supreme Court’s South Dakota v. Wayfair, Upends State Limitations on Taxing of Online Businesses

Dickinson Wright on

In a sign of how far e-commerce has changed in just a little over two decades, on June 21, 2018, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned its 1992 decision of Quill v. North Dakota (504 U.S. 298). The implications of this...more

Alston & Bird

INSIGHT: ‘Wayfair’: What Are the Practical Retroactivity Concerns?

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What is the practical risk that states would take in applying Wayfair retroactively? And should taxpayers rush to limit exposure for historical periods by entering into voluntary disclosure agreements with states that might...more

Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP

South Dakota v. Wayfair and the End of Quill: Sales Tax Collection in a Digital Age

In a decision dated June 21 – South Dakota v. Wayfair – the Supreme Court held that no “physical presence” is required for a state to impose sales tax collection obligations on out-of-state vendors....more

Bowditch & Dewey

Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly publishes "'Wayfair': For small online retailers, future uncertain"

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On June 21, the U.S. Supreme Court upended the online retail industry, giving states the power to force online retailers to collect sales tax from sales to consumers. Prior to the landmark South Dakota v. Wayfair decision,...more

Cooley LLP

Alert: States React to Wayfair

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As we previously reported, on June 21, the Supreme Court overturned the longstanding rule that a state was prohibited from requiring a remote seller to collect sales tax where the seller had no physical presence in the state....more

Husch Blackwell LLP

U.S. Supreme Court’s Decision On Sales Tax Has Big Implications

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In South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc., et al., the U.S. Supreme Court recently overruled long-standing precedent on what is necessary to create “nexus” to collect sales or use tax on sales into a particular state. The decision...more

Nutter McClennen & Fish LLP

Supreme Court Reverses Precedent in Search of a [Way]Fair Outcome

South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc., decided on June 21, 2018, required the Supreme Court to assess how its own precedent fit in the era of online commerce. Buyers and sellers in the United States are familiar with the sales tax...more

Lowndes

No Presence Necessary - Supreme Court Breaks Silence on Remote Retailer Tax Debate

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If convenience wasn’t reason enough for you to shop online, the sales tax saving probably was. Not anymore after Justice Kennedy’s final majority opinion for the Supreme Court in the South Dakota v. Wayfair case....more

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