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You Can't Go Holmes Again
Mulligan, Lumen N.
Mulligan, Lumen N.
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Abstract
Under the standard interpretation of 28 U.S.C. ยง 1331, the so called Holmes test, pleading a federal cause of action is sufficient for finding federal question jurisdiction. In January 2012, the Supreme Court, in Mims v. Arrow Financial Services, LLC, recharacterized this standard test for ยง 1331 jurisdiction as one that considers whether โfederal law creates [both] a private right of action and furnishes the substantive rules of decision.โ In this first piece to address the Mims Courtโs significant change to the ยง 1331 canon, I applaud its rights-inclusive holding. I contend that this rights-inclusive view rests upon a firmer jurisprudential framework than does the Holmes test, as the latter is intertwined with an anachronistic pairing of causes of action and rights with Justice Holmesโs overall โbad manโ approach to the law. I argue further that Mimsโs rights-inclusive approach more accurately describes ยง 1331 doctrine as a whole, helping to illuminate that โ contrary to the Holmes test โ merely pleading a federal cause of action is neither necessary nor sufficient for taking statutory federal question jurisdiction. I also demonstrate that this rights-inclusive view is more solicitous of the intent of the 1875 Congress, which passed ยง 1331, and of the intentions of later-in-time Congresses, which passed legislation against the presumption that federal rights provide grounds for taking federal question jurisdiction, than is the Holmes test.
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Date
2012
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Publisher
Northwestern University Law Review
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Keywords
Federal question jurisdiction, 28 usc 1331
Citation
107 Nw. U. L. Review 237 (2012)
