| Case # | Name | Category | Court | Judge | Published |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
B338140
|
In re X.D.
Where incarcerated parent's suggestions for potential caregivers were not suitable, reliable or appropriate, juvenile court properly exerted jurisdiction over child. |
Dependency |
|
B. Hoffstadt | Sep. 12, 2025 |
|
B329413
|
People v. Orozco
Amending information to include conspiracy to commit murder charge right before jury selection was improper because the offense had not been shown by evidence at the preliminary hearing. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
J. Wiley | Sep. 12, 2025 |
|
B315302
|
Ranger v. Alamitos Bay Yacht Club
Yacht Club employee properly asserted general maritime claims of negligence and unseaworthiness against employer for a deckside slip and fall while mooring a boat. |
Maritime Law |
|
J. Wiley | Sep. 12, 2025 |
|
A168697
|
Modification: People v. Mendez-Torres
Modified jury instruction that defined the force required for robbery without any reference to the victim's physical resistance misstated the law and required reversal. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
D. Chou | Sep. 12, 2025 |
|
24-4291
|
Woolard v. Thurmond
Public schools' independent home study programs were sufficiently public, rather than private, disallowing the purchase and use of faith-based materials for home use. |
Education, Constitutional Law |
|
A. Hurwitz | Sep. 12, 2025 |
|
24-3970
|
Rearden, LLC v. Walt Disney Pictures
JMOL was improperly granted for Disney, where evidence at trial was sufficient to establish that Disney had legal right and ability to stop copyright infringement and thus be vicariously liable. |
Copyright |
|
L. Koh | Sep. 12, 2025 |
|
B329575
|
People v. Adir International LLC
Civil Code sections 1805.4 and 1810.4's "no fee" provisions bar all fees not specifically authorized and regulated by the Unruh Retail Installment Sales Act for retail installment purchases. |
Consumer Law |
|
M. Stratton | Sep. 11, 2025 |
|
B334998
|
People v. Mills
Reversal was not warranted where elderly criminal defendant with prior strikes sought reconsideration of his sentence to make him eligible for parole before the end of his life expectancy. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
K. Yegan | Sep. 11, 2025 |
|
G064274
|
People v. Ball
Felony brandishing a firearm at a person in a motor vehicle does not require a showing that the victim experienced subjective fear. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
N. Scott | Sep. 11, 2025 |
|
22-55685
|
U.S. v. Nasri
Order |
|
Sep. 11, 2025 | ||
|
24-1253
|
U.S. v. Keast
District court erred when calculating defendant's sentence because his prior Oregon conviction for unlawful use of a weapon with a firearm enhancement did not constitute a "crime of violence" under the Sentencing Guidelines. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
J. Sung | Sep. 11, 2025 |
|
23-1294
|
U.S. v. Green
District court did not abuse its discretion in denying criminal defendant pre-trial discovery related to selective enforcement claim where the defendant used a small sample size to support his motion. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
K. Lee | Sep. 11, 2025 |
|
23-55361
|
U.S. ex rel. Jones v. Biotronik, Inc.
Where relator's complaint provided new and material allegations, False Claims Act's public disclosure bar did not apply. |
Torts |
|
M. Christen | Sep. 11, 2025 |
|
24-3569
|
Galvez v. Bisignano
Inclusion of same text used in a different administrative law judge's original decision that had been tainted by an Appointments Clause violation did not automatically taint the new ALJ's decision. |
Constitutional Law |
|
M. Christen | Sep. 11, 2025 |
|
E083552
|
People v. Garcia
Trial and appellate courts lacked jurisdiction to rule on defendant's statutorily unauthorized petition to vacate fees when his conviction was final. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
A. McKinster | Sep. 10, 2025 |
|
A169729
|
Davis v. CSAA Insurance Exchange
Because Insurance Code section 1861.05(a) imposes no independent duty on insurers to refund premiums, claims seeking retroactive COVID-19 automobile insurance refunds were properly dismissed. |
Insurance |
|
J. Humes | Sep. 10, 2025 |
|
B332160
|
Pacho Limited Partnership v. Eureka Energy Co.
Lease of land allowing any lawful purpose was not a lease for agricultural purposes limited to 51 years, even though the property had always been used for cattle grazing to lower the risk of wildfires. |
Real Property |
|
K. Yegan | Sep. 10, 2025 |
|
F087142
|
John Doe R.L. v. Merced City School District
Because Assembly bill's retroactive exemption of childhood sexual assault claims created procedural immunity rather than new substantive liability for public entities, it did not violate the California Constitution's gift clause. |
Education, Immunity |
|
J. Detjen | Sep. 10, 2025 |
|
H051724
|
Hu v. City of San Jose
Because bike lane adjacent to city street was not a "trail" under Government Code section 835, trail immunity did not shield City from potential liability for biker's injury. |
Municipal Law, Immunity |
|
C. Lie | Sep. 10, 2025 |
|
A169588
|
Conservatorship of A.H.
Petitioner was deprived of due process where conservatorship trial took 10 months to reach a grave disability finding. |
Conservatorship |
|
D. Chou | Sep. 10, 2025 |
|
A170546
|
People v. Roberts
California's concealed carry firearm licensing requirement passed Second Amendment muster. |
Constitutional Law |
|
J. Streeter | Sep. 10, 2025 |
|
F087809
|
Kruitbosch v. Bakersfield Recovery Services, Inc.
Although allegedly harassing conduct took place outside of work hours and off work property, employer's response to the reported conduct may have created a hostile work environment. |
Employment Discrimination, Torts |
|
K. Meehan | Sep. 10, 2025 |
|
23-1439
|
U.S. v. Stennerson
Prohibition on possession of firearms by unlawful drug users did not facially violate the Second Amendment because it was consistent with the nation's history and tradition of firearm regulations. |
Constitutional Law, Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
D. Forrest | Sep. 10, 2025 |
|
25-146
|
Netchoice LLC v. Bonta
Protecting Our Kids from Social Media Addiction Act's provision hiding number of "likes" from minors failed strict scrutiny; provision setting minors' accounts to "private mode" passed intermediate scrutiny. |
Constitutional Law |
|
R. Nelson | Sep. 10, 2025 |
|
A171350
|
Baker v. San Mateo County Employees Retirement Assn.
County employee's disability retirement date was determined using final receipt of "regular compensation," which included compensation paid in an accommodated position at the same salary. |
Government |
|
M. Langhorne Wilson | Sep. 9, 2025 |
|
24-720
|
Trader Joe's Company v. Trader Joes United
*Sleekcraft* factors supported a plausible likelihood of confusion for Trader Joe's trademark infringement claim against a Trader Joe's labor union's use of the mark in union merchandise. |
Intellectual Property, Labor Law |
|
G. Sanchez | Sep. 9, 2025 |
|
24-1972
|
People of the State of California v. Express Scripts
After removal to federal court, plaintiff's express disclaimer of all claims that provided basis for federal jurisdiction in amended complaint removed district court's federal-question jurisdiction, requiring remand. |
Civil Procedure |
|
M. Murguia | Sep. 9, 2025 |
|
24-3374
|
Jones v. City of North Las Vegas
Though officers' warrantless backyard entry was unlawful due to their tardiness in pursuing fleeing suspect, individual officer's shooting of attacking dogs after entry was entitled to qualified immunity. |
Criminal Law and Procedure, Immunity |
|
S. Mendoza | Sep. 9, 2025 |
|
24-3949
|
Biani v. Showtime Networks Inc.
Copyright suit was properly dismissed where allegedly infringing characters in the show *Penny Dreadful* were not so strikingly similar to plaintiff's characters as to preclude the possibility of independent creation. |
Copyright |
|
J. Nguyen | Sep. 9, 2025 |
|
23-2282
|
U.S. v. Jesenik
Omissions tethered to affirmative misstatements to investors were sufficient to support wire fraud convictions. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
A. Hurwitz | Sep. 8, 2025 |