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Empirical SCOTUS: Hitting the nail on the head — successful cert-stage amicus briefs in cases with financial implications

Not surprisingly, most cases before the Supreme Court involve high stakes. The justices can assure this by taking a small and selective caseload each term. With so many potential cases petitioned to the court on such a wide range of issues, the court really has the pick of the litter in terms of possible cases to hear. The types of issues involved in cases also range greatly, from individual or group rights to the limitations on actions by federal and state actors.

Many of these cases also have direct or indirect financial implications. How much these cases will affect the economy is often not entirely clear at the outset, but the potential areas of impact are often demarcated through cases’ progress in the lower courts. A certain set of groups is highly active within the band of cases with direct financial implications. These groups have an interest in seeing these cases proceed to the Supreme Court and in the eventual case outcomes. This post identifies these groups and the extent of their involvement in the initial stages of Supreme Court litigation. Specifically, it tracks their involvement as amici for petitions in cases with direct financial implications that the justices later heard on the merits between the 2008 and 2018 terms.

The Supreme Court heard 704 oral arguments between the 2008 and 2017 terms and has a slate of 71 possible arguments on the calendar for this term. Out of these 775 cases, 180, or just over 23 percent, were coded as having direct financial or business implications. Within this subset of cases, 118, or about 65.5 percent, had at least one cert-stage amicus brief. Cert-stage amicus briefs are seen as a way to provide the court with an additional signal or signals that a case warrants its review. They are risky endeavors, however, because they have little independent value if the court rejects a case. They can also be contrasted with amicus briefs on the merits, which are more prevalent, but are only tied to cases already on the court’s merits docket.

A good example of such a case is South Dakota v. Wayfair Inc. from last termIn this case, the Supreme Court overruled several of its prior precedents by establishing the principle that states can require out-of-state sellers with no physical presence in the state to collect and remit sales taxes on goods the seller ships to consumers within the state. Direct and indirect effects on financial interests from this case will be and are numerous and dispersed across the country.

A decision that will likely have a narrower although not insignificant economic impact on businesses is this term’s Helsinn Healthcare S.A. v. Teva Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. In this case, the Supreme Court held that an invention is “on sale,” and therefore cannot be patented, if the inventor made a private sale of the invention before seeking a patent.

Conversely, there are many cases that may have secondary effects on financial interests that weren’t captured in this dataset. An example of such a case is last term’s Lucia v. Securities and Exchange Commission. In that case, the Supreme Court decided that SEC administrative law judges are “officers of the United States,” and so they are subject to the Constitution’s appointments clause. Even though the decisions of these judges will inevitably have down-the-line financial implications, this case was not coded as having a direct impact on financial interests.

The majority of cases coded as affecting financial interests also have cert-stage amicus filings. The graph of business-related cases affecting financial interests per term since OT 2008, along with business-related cases with financial implications with amicus filings, highlights this point.

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Interestingly, although the total number of such cases has fluctuated over the years in a manner unrelated to changes in the court’s overall docket, the number of such cases with cert-stage amicus filings has remained relatively constant. The implication here might be that groups with limited resources tend to focus on a certain number of cases each term, and the groups’ filings tend to cluster within specific cases.

When we look at cases across these terms involving financial interests that have the most cert-stage amicus filings, the Wayfair case leads the pack by a significant margin.

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In fact, groups filed seven more briefs in Wayfair than in the case with the next greatest number of briefs, American Electric Power Co. v. Connecticut. The Helsinn Healthcare case leads the way this term with 10 cert-stage amicus briefs, which also places it with the fifth most such briefs across all cases in this set since 2008.

Several interest groups dominate the field in terms of filings within this case subset. The groups with the most such filings since 2008 are depicted below.

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The United States, the most frequent amicus across all Supreme Court cases, also leads the way in terms of filings within this case set. The United States Chamber of Commerce is the interest group with not only the most such cert-stage filings, but more than twice as many as the group with the next most filings, the Washington Legal Foundation (which had eight such briefs). Other leaders in this filing area were DRI – The Voice of the Defense Bar and Public Knowledge.

Some groups have more success on a term-by-term basis than others. To gauge this type of success, the next graph tracks groups that have had at least two cert-stage amicus briefs in a term in cases the Supreme Court granted between the 2008 and 2018 terms.

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After the United States, the Chamber of Commerce leads the way with six terms of two or more cert-stage amicus briefs in this set of granted cases. The only other group with more than one term of at least two briefs in granted cases was the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

When groups plan to file cert-stage amicus briefs, they need to decide whether they will author them internally or engage an outside law firm to prepare the brief. The next several figures observe the firm/interest group relationships. The first such figure tracks the firms whose attorneys were counsel of record on the greatest number of briefs in this set of cases.

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Sidley Austin led the way with six such briefs and was followed closely by Mayer Brown, Winston & Strawn, and Shook, Hardy, and Bacon, who each authored five briefs in this set.

As for the other end of the spectrum, the next graph shows the groups that decided upon internal counsel of record on the most briefs in this set.

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The United States naturally has an inherent advantage in this area, as the Solicitor General’s Office tends to author all of its briefs internally. The Chamber of Commerce, which has the next most such brief authorships, has five times as many as the groups with the next most internally authored briefs, DRI – The Voice of the Defense Bar and the American Intellectual Property Law Association, which each have four of these internally authored briefs.

Finally, certain amici link up with particular law firms for authorship relationships. A handful of amici went to the same firm more than once for cert-stage amicus briefs in granted cases within this set. These relationships are shown below.

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The only group with multiple such relationships for this period is the Chamber of Commerce, which had four firms that each authored two cert-stage briefs for the Chamber in granted cases between OT 2008 and OT 2018. These four firms are Baker Botts, Mayer Brown, Proskauer Rose and Sidley Austin. In addition to these firms, Williams Montgomery authored two briefs in this set for the Intellectual Property Law Association of Chicago and Constantine Cannon authored two briefs for the Retail Industry Leaders Association.

A main takeaway from these data and analyses is that the Chamber of Commerce is a filing leader in this area. It effectively files cert-stage briefs in a high level of granted cases with distinct financial implications. The Chamber, with its wide reach, is one of the top amicus-brief filers on a term-by-term basis across all cases before the Supreme Court. Other groups that file fewer amicus briefs on the aggregate have been highly successful with their choices of cases for cert-stage amicus filings in this area. These groups include the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the American Intellectual Property Law Association, the Washington Legal Foundation and DRI – The Voice of the Defense Bar. Several big law firms tend to take on large authorship roles in this area including, most notably, Sidley Austin. Although the Chamber of Commerce will likely lead the way for amici in this area for the foreseeable future, especially when focusing on cases involving financial interests, other groups like the ones just mentioned may play large roles in helping to define the court’s merits docket if they continue to file cert-stage amicus briefs in cases the court later grants for merits review.

This post was originally published at Empirical SCOTUS.

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Past cases linked to in this post:

American Electric Power Co. v. Connecticut, 564 U.S. 410 (2011)
Helsinn Healthcare S. A. v. Teva Pharms. United States, Inc., No. 17-1229 (U.S. Jan. 22, 2019)
Lucia v. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, 138 S. Ct. 2044 (2018)
South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc., No. 17-494 (U.S. Jun. 21, 2018)

Recommended Citation: Adam Feldman, Empirical SCOTUS: Hitting the nail on the head — successful cert-stage amicus briefs in cases with financial implications, SCOTUSblog (Feb. 12, 2019, 2:30 PM), https://www.scotusblog.com/2019/02/empirical-scotus-hitting-the-nail-on-the-head-successful-cert-stage-amicus-briefs-in-cases-with-financial-implications/