NLRB v. Noel Canning (2014)

GPTKB entity

Statements (38)
Predicate Object
gptkbp:instanceOf gptkb:United_States_Supreme_Court_case
gptkbp:arguedDate January 13, 2014
gptkbp:category gptkb:2014_in_United_States_case_law
United States Supreme Court cases of the Roberts Court
United States separation of powers case law
gptkbp:citation 573 U.S. 513
gptkbp:concurringOpinionBy gptkb:Anthony_Kennedy
gptkb:John_Roberts
gptkb:Antonin_Scalia
gptkb:Clarence_Thomas
gptkb:Samuel_Alito
gptkbp:constitution gptkb:U.S._Constitution_Article_II,_Section_2,_Clause_3
gptkbp:date June 26, 2014
gptkbp:decidedBy gptkb:Supreme_Court_of_the_United_States
gptkbp:docketNumber 12-1281
gptkbp:effect Limited the President's power to make recess appointments
gptkbp:fullName gptkb:National_Labor_Relations_Board_v._Noel_Canning,_et_al.
gptkbp:heldBy The President's recess-appointment power is limited to breaks between formal sessions of the Senate, and only to vacancies that arise during those breaks.
https://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label NLRB v. Noel Canning (2014)
gptkbp:majorityOpinionBy gptkb:Anthony_Kennedy
gptkb:John_Roberts
gptkb:Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg
gptkb:Sonia_Sotomayor
gptkb:Elena_Kagan
gptkb:Stephen_Breyer
gptkbp:petitioner gptkb:National_Labor_Relations_Board
gptkbp:predecessor Interpretation of the Recess Appointments Clause
gptkbp:relatedTo gptkb:Barack_Obama
gptkb:U.S._Senate
Labor law
gptkbp:response gptkb:Noel_Canning
gptkbp:subject gptkb:National_Labor_Relations_Board
gptkb:Separation_of_powers
Presidential powers
Recess appointments
gptkbp:unanimousDecision true
gptkbp:bfsParent gptkb:Article_II,_Section_2,_Clause_3
gptkbp:bfsLayer 7