On Monday morning, the Supreme Court will file its opinion in Connor v. First Student, Inc., which was argued on the late-May calendar. (Briefs here; oral argument video here.)
Although the court is filing only one opinion Monday, it will likely be filing eight more opinions within the following 10 days. After Monday, and within the 90-day period, there will be two more regular filing days (August 23 and 27) for six undecided late-May calendar cases and three regular filing days (August 23, 27, and 30) for the two undecided June calendar cases.
The Connor case involves the issue whether the Investigative Consumer Reporting Agencies Act (Civ. Code, § 1786 et seq.) is unconstitutionally vague as applied to background checks conducted on a company’s employees, because persons and entities subject to both that Act and the Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies Act (Civ. Code, §1785.1 et seq.) cannot determine which statute applies. Third District Justice Ronald Robie is the pro tem.
The Connor opinion can be viewed Monday starting at 10:00 a.m.
[Update: I now see that the opinion in one late-May case does not need to be filed by August 27. People v. Powell (Carl Devon) was not submitted until three weeks after oral argument, after supplemental briefs were filed. The opinion thus can be filed by September 17.]