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United States v. Miller

Docket: 23-824 Decision Date: 2025-03-26
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This links to the official slip opinion PDF.
How to read this page

Below are plain-language sections to help you understand what the Court decided in United States v. Miller and why it matters. Quotes are taken from the syllabus (the Court’s short summary at the start of the opinion).

Summary

A short, plain-English overview of United States v. Miller.

The Supreme Court addressed the scope of sovereign immunity waivers under the Bankruptcy Code, specifically whether § 106(a) waives immunity for state-law claims within a § 544(b) claim. The Court concluded that § 106(a)'s waiver applies only to the § 544(b) claim itself, not to state-law claims. This decision reversed the Tenth Circuit's affirmation of the lower court's ruling.

Holding

The single most important “bottom line” of what the Court decided in United States v. Miller.

The Court held that Section 106(a)'s sovereign-immunity waiver applies only to a § 544(b) claim itself and not to state-law claims nested within that federal claim.

Constitutional Concepts

These are the Constitution-related themes that appear in United States v. Miller. Click a concept to see other cases that involve the same idea.

  • Why State Sovereign Immunity is relevant to United States v. Miller

    The case primarily deals with the waiver of sovereign immunity under the Bankruptcy Code, specifically addressing whether state-law claims nested within a federal claim are covered by the waiver.

    Syllabus excerpt (verbatim)
    Held: Section 106(a)'s sovereign-immunity waiver applies only to a § 544(b) claim itself and not to state-law claims nested within that federal claim.
  • Why Judicial Review is relevant to United States v. Miller

    The Court's decision involves interpreting statutory provisions to determine the scope of judicial power to hear claims against the government.

    Syllabus excerpt (verbatim)
    Waivers of sovereign immunity function simply as 'prerequisite[s] for jurisdiction'—they do not create any new substantive rights or alter any pre-existing ones.

Key Quotes

Short excerpts from the syllabus in United States v. Miller that support the summary and concepts above.

  • "Section 106(a)'s sovereign-immunity waiver applies only to a § 544(b) claim itself and not to state-law claims nested within that federal claim."
  • "Waivers of sovereign immunity function simply as 'prerequisite[s] for jurisdiction'—they do not create any new substantive rights or alter any pre-existing ones."
  • "The Court's precedents require construing sovereign-immunity waivers narrowly, with any ambiguities resolved in favor of the sovereign."

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