A newsletter dedicated to tracking appellate cases in Minnesota. Trends, analysis, and the sort of fun only appellate minutia can offer. Run by @danielsuitor.com. Newsletters/posts are for informational purposes, not legal advice.
I really respect any judicial or quasi-judicial body that takes one look at a tough case and issues an opinion saying "actually we don't have the authority to deal with this, good luck!"
December 8, 2025 at 8:55 PM
I really respect any judicial or quasi-judicial body that takes one look at a tough case and issues an opinion saying "actually we don't have the authority to deal with this, good luck!"
It's pretty rare for a state agency to sue a district court directly! But then again, it seems quite rare for a district court to allegedy ignore an agency's statutory authority and direct services to a county instead so that (allegedly) the county can collect fees for those services.
December 5, 2025 at 6:17 PM
It's pretty rare for a state agency to sue a district court directly! But then again, it seems quite rare for a district court to allegedy ignore an agency's statutory authority and direct services to a county instead so that (allegedly) the county can collect fees for those services.
The core dispute is that the Department of Corrections refused to approve Wright County to become the parole administrator bc it refused to meet its statutory duty to re-employ all the DOC employees "with all of the benefits enjoyed" at DOC. Here, the County wouldn't provide accrued leave.
December 5, 2025 at 6:15 PM
The core dispute is that the Department of Corrections refused to approve Wright County to become the parole administrator bc it refused to meet its statutory duty to re-employ all the DOC employees "with all of the benefits enjoyed" at DOC. Here, the County wouldn't provide accrued leave.
I am not an expert on writs practice, but my first question is whether the COA has jursdiction to hear this petition, or whether it needed to be directed to the district court first (maybe the chief judge?). I'll admit it seems futile, but the DOC's brief doesn't hit that issue squarely on the head
December 5, 2025 at 6:10 PM
I am not an expert on writs practice, but my first question is whether the COA has jursdiction to hear this petition, or whether it needed to be directed to the district court first (maybe the chief judge?). I'll admit it seems futile, but the DOC's brief doesn't hit that issue squarely on the head
At the suggestion of a friend, I added some statistics about case timing. I may not publish these on a weekly basis, at least for the COA, given how bouncy they might be. But worth tracking in the long term.
December 2, 2025 at 2:17 AM
At the suggestion of a friend, I added some statistics about case timing. I may not publish these on a weekly basis, at least for the COA, given how bouncy they might be. But worth tracking in the long term.
I'm trying not to bite off too much with these blogs, but I wanted to do a few recurring bits and I think the Sentence of the Week is going to be a winner
December 1, 2025 at 11:25 PM
I'm trying not to bite off too much with these blogs, but I wanted to do a few recurring bits and I think the Sentence of the Week is going to be a winner
It does appear that the defendent in this case is a sovereign citizen with some pretty extreme beliefs, even for that philosophy's already strained set of legal theories, that include founding his own "bank." Good work getting the entity its own EIN, though. That's a nice touch.
December 1, 2025 at 6:26 PM
It does appear that the defendent in this case is a sovereign citizen with some pretty extreme beliefs, even for that philosophy's already strained set of legal theories, that include founding his own "bank." Good work getting the entity its own EIN, though. That's a nice touch.
The key issue is the Church Autonomy Doctrine. Notably, this is different than the ministerial exemption, where most SCOTUS discrimination case law w/r/t religious employers arises. The COA goes beyond to say that even purely secular employees of a religious institution can be discriminated against.
December 1, 2025 at 5:26 PM
The key issue is the Church Autonomy Doctrine. Notably, this is different than the ministerial exemption, where most SCOTUS discrimination case law w/r/t religious employers arises. The COA goes beyond to say that even purely secular employees of a religious institution can be discriminated against.