January 01, 1991
Supreme Court case American Hospital Association v. NLRB (AHA) is cited, where the court upheld the NLRB's health care unit rule.
| Name | Type | Mentions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| American Hospital Association | person | 0 | View Entity |
| National Labor Relations Board | person | 0 | View Entity |
| U.S. Supreme Court | organization | 403 | View Entity |
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022311.jpg
This document is page 54040 from the Federal Register, dated August 30, 2011, detailing a legal argument against a new rule by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). The author contends the NLRB overstepped its statutory authority, citing legal precedents on agency power and the 'arbitrary and capricious' standard. Despite the user's framing, this document is entirely about U.S. labor law and contains no information whatsoever related to Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or any of their activities.
Events with shared participants
Supreme Court case: Freytag v. Commissioner. A unanimous Court ruled on the appointment of special trial judges by the U.S. Tax Court under the Appointments Clause.
1991-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case: Myers v. United States. The President refused to enforce a limitation on his removal power, and the Supreme Court vindicated the President's interpretation.
1926-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case *Myers v. United States*, where the Court vindicated the President's refusal to enforce a law he believed was unconstitutional.
1926-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case *Freytag v. Commissioner*, where the Court ruled on the appointment of special trial judges by the U.S. Tax Court, leading to a concurrence by Justice Scalia on Presidential power.
1991-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case Myers v. United States, where the President refused to enforce a law limiting his removal power, and the Supreme Court vindicated his interpretation.
1926-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case Freytag v. Commissioner, which ruled on the appointment of special trial judges and included a concurrence from Justice Scalia on presidential power.
1991-01-01 • United States
The Supreme Court case Myers v. United States (272 U.S. 52) was litigated. The court struck down a statute limiting the President's removal power as unconstitutional.
1926-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case Myers v. United States, where the court struck down a statute limiting the President's removal power.
1926-01-01 • United States
The Supreme Court recognized the practice of presidential signing statements in the case of INS v. Chadha.
1983-01-01 • N/A
Supreme Court ruling in INS v. Chadha, which recognized the practice of presidents approving legislation while noting constitutional objections.
1983-01-01 • N/A
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