National Pork es un caso Bibb, no un caso Pike

Authors

  • Michael S. Knoll
  • Ruth Mason

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48297/rtt.v1i140.2348

Keywords:

National Pork, dormant Commerce Clause, regulatory mismatches

Abstract

 

 

In October 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral argument in National Pork Producers Council v. Ross, a Ninth Circuit case out of California, dismissing a challenge to Proposition 12, which, inter alia, bans the sale of wholesome pork (without regard to where it was produced) from the offspring of breeding sows confined in a manner California voters consider "cruel". National Pork thus puts the Court in the position of choosing between the often-criticized undue-burden strand of the and California's request that the Court approve its ban on out-of-state pork not because of the products' qualities, but merely because Californians are offended by the manner in which such pork was produced. The parties in the case and most of the amici rightly argue that, under Supreme Court precedent, the case must be analyzed using undue- burden balancing. Relying on Bibb Balancing: Regulatory Mismatches Under the Dormant Commerce Clause, an article we wrote that is forthcoming in this Journal, this Note explains that regulatory mismatch cases receive a different kind of balancing analysis from the Supreme Court than do more run-of-the-mill cases. Because National Pork is a regulatory mismatch case, in our view, Bibb v. Navajo Freight Lines, Inc. is a more relevant precedent than is Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc.

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Author Biographies

  • Michael S. Knoll

    Catedrático Theodore Warner de la Facultad de Derecho Carey en la Universidad de Pensilvania,
    Catedrático de Derecho Inmobiliario, Wharton y Codirector del Centro de Derecho y Política Fiscal de la Universidad de Pensilvania (Estados Unidos)

  • Ruth Mason

    Profesora Distinguida de Derecho y Fiscalidad Edwin S. Cohen de la Facultad de Derecho en la Universidad de Virginia (Estados Unidos)

    Cómo referenciar:
    Versión impresa:
    Knoll, M.S., Mason, R. (2023). National Pork es un caso Bibb, no un caso Pike. Revista Técnica Tributaria  (140), 121-134.

    Versión electrónica:
    Knoll, M.S., Mason, R. (2023). National Pork es un caso Bibb, no un caso Pike. Revista Técnica Tributaria  (140), 121-134.  https://doi.org/10.48297/rtt.v1i140.2348

     

Published

25/04/2023

How to Cite

Knoll, M. S., & Mason, R. (2023). National Pork es un caso Bibb, no un caso Pike. Technical Tax Journal, 1(140), 121-134. https://doi.org/10.48297/rtt.v1i140.2348