Today the Supreme Court denied Chevron’s petition for a writ of certiorari in Chevron v. Naranjo, the case in which the Second Circuit had vacated Judge Kaplan’s preliminary injunction barring efforts at obtaining recognition and enforcement of the Lago Agrio judgment. The Second Circuit’s decision rested on what I think was a questionable basis, namely, that a judgment debtor could not seek a declaratory judgment about the enforceability of a foreign judgment until the judgment creditor had sought to enforce it. More to come.
Breaking: Supreme Court Denies Cert. in Naranjo
3 responses to “Breaking: Supreme Court Denies Cert. in Naranjo”
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[…] to use your full name at every opportunity.Chevron, bouncing back from the Supreme Court’s denial of its petition for a writ of certiorari in the Naranjo case, has gone on the offensive and moved […]
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[…] to bring the case within the courts’ subject-matter jurisdiction. But since the Supreme Court denied Chevron’s petition for a writ of certiorari, we are stuck with the decision as it […]
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[…] bouncing back from the Supreme Court’s denial of its petition for a writ of certiorari in the Naranjo case, has gone on the offensive and moved […]
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