550 U.S. 544 (2007) Cited 281,939 times 369 Legal Analyses
Holding that allegations of conduct that are merely consistent with wrongdoing do not state a claim unless "placed in a context that raises a suggestion of" such wrongdoing
Holding that where a jury demand has been made, an issue is submitted to the jury without objection, and "the possibility that the jury's findings might be advisory was never mentioned until after the verdict was returned," the verdict is binding under Rule 39(c)
Finding that the State of Louisiana had not waived Eleventh Amendment immunity by failing to raise it as a defense in district court but instead litigating on the merits
Holding that, to adequately plead copyright infringement, a plaintiff must allege "by what acts during what time the defendant infringed the copyright"
Holding that the Patent Remedy Act did not effectively abrogate the States' sovereign immunity because its attempt to do so was not a valid act of Congressional power
Finding that testimony presented to Congress primarily concerned threat of future abuse of immunity from damages by the States as opposed to evidence of current constitutional deprivations