Garland Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Texas State Teachers Ass'n, 479 U.S. 801 (1986). · Go Syfert
Garland Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Texas State Teachers Ass'n, 479 U.S. 801 (1986). Cases Citing This Book View Copy Cite
“injury to first amendment rights may result from the threat of enforcement itself, since it may chill the plaintiff's ardor and eliminate his desire to engage in protected expression.”
28 citation events (3 in the last 25 years) across 12 distinct courts.
Strongest positive: Washington Education Ass'n v. Public Disclosure Commission (wash, 2003-12-11)
Treatment trajectory · 1988 → 2026 · click a year to view as-of
1988 2007 2026
Top citers, strongest first. 3 distinct citers. How cited ↗
discussed Cited as authority (quoted) Washington Education Ass'n v. Public Disclosure Commission
Wash. · 2003 · quote attribution · 1 verbatim quote · confidence low
injury to first amendment rights may result from the threat of enforcement itself, since it may chill the plaintiff's ardor and eliminate his desire to engage in protected expression.
cited Cited "see" Texas State Teachers Ass'n v. Garland Independent School District
SCOTUS · 1989 · signal: see · confidence high
See Garland Independent School Dist. v. Texas State Teachers Assn., 479 U. S. 801 (1986).
discussed Cited "see, e.g." Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. v. State Board of Real Property Services
N.Y. App. Div. · 1999 · signal: see also · confidence low
With respect to the alleged inequality of special franchise assessments in particular, evidence on this issue is limited by statute to the State equalization rate or special equalization rate used in determining the challenged assessment (see, RPTL 744 [1]; see also, Matter of Consolidated Edison Co. v State Bd. of Equalization & Assessment, 103 AD2d 453, 458 , affd 67 NY2d 783 , appeal dismissed 479 US 801 ).
Retrieving the full opinion text from the archive…
Garland Independent School District
v.
Texas State Teachers Assn.
No. 85-1890.
Supreme Court of the United States.
Oct 6, 1986.
479 U.S. 801
Jurisdiction, Set, Would.
Cited by 4 opinions  |  Published
1 passage pin-cited by 1 case
Pinpoint authority: bottom 89%
Citer courts: Washington Supreme Court (1)

Affirmed on appeal from C. A. 5th Cir.

The Chief Justice and Justice White would note probable jurisdiction and set case for argument.