128YaleLJF724 PDF
128YaleLJF724 PDF
Citations:
-- Your use of this HeinOnline PDF indicates your acceptance of HeinOnline's Terms and
Conditions of the license agreement availablehttps://heinonline.org/HOL/License
at
-- The search text of this PDF is generated from uncorrected OCR text.
Use QR Code reader to send PDF to your smartphone or tablet device
THE YALE LAW JOURNAL FORUM
FEBRUARY 5, 2019
A B STRACT. This Essay exposes connections between two controversial cases that unsettled
two ostensibly distinct areas of constitutional law. The Supreme Court's 2018 decision in South
Dakotav. Wayfair held that the Commerce Clause permits enforcement of sales taxes against online
retailers with no physical presence in the taxing state. In contrast, the Court's 2011 decision inJ.
McIntyre Machinery v. Nicastro held that the Due Process Clause prevents states from exercising
personal jurisdiction over nonresident manufacturers who did not target the forum. Wayfair and
Nicastro address conceptually similar questions about extraterritorial enforcement of state law yet
rely on inconsistent assumptions. A close reading of Wayfair illuminates normative and practical
insights that warrant narrowing or overruling Nicastro. More generally, this Essay highlights how
situating doctrinal problems in the broader context of horizontal federalism can improve
constitutional analysis.
INTRODUCTION
1. 138 S. Ct. 2080 (2018). The dissent "agree [d]" that prior doctrine was flawed for "many of the
reasons given by the Court" but preferred to respect stare decisis and await a legislative
solution. Id. at 2101 (Roberts, C.J., dissenting).
WAYFAIR UNDERMINES NICASTRO
2. See id. at 2088 (majority opinion) (noting varying estimates of increased state tax revenue).
3. See Brian Deagon, E-Commerce Stocks Smacked by Supreme Court Ruling on State Taxes, INv.
Bus. DAILY (June 21, 2018), https://www.investors.com/research/ibd-industry-themes/
supreme- court-ruling- ecommerce -stocks [https ://perma.cc/ESU6 -5RK].
4. See, e.g., Hamilton Davison, Supreme Court Sales Tax Ruling Is Clear; Ramifications of It Could
Not Be Less Clear, HILL (June 29, 2018, 8:io AM EDT), http://thehill.com/blogs/congress
-blog/economy-budget/3947 o-supreme- court- sales -tax-ruling-is- clear-ramifications -of
[https://perma.cc/SDNM-P2SK] (expressing views of the President of the American Catalog
Mailers Association). For a discussion of the "practice opportunities" that Wayfair creates for
lobbyists and lawyers, see Jasper L. Cummings, Jr.,JudicialActivism and the Commerce Clause,
2018 ST. TAX NOTES 889, 890-91.
5. See, e.g., Stop Taxing Our Potential Act of 2018, S. 3180, ll 5 th Cong.; Online Sales Simplicity
and Small Business Relief Act of 2018, H.R. 6824, ll 5 th Cong.; see also Brian Galle, Kill Quill,
Keep the Dormant Commerce Clause: History's Lessons on CongressionalControl of State Taxation,
70 STAN. L. REV. ONLINE 158 (2018) (discussing potential legislative reforms).
6. See Joseph Bishop-Henchman et al., Post-Wayfair Options for States, J. MULTISTATE TAX'N &
INCENTIVES, Nov./Dec. 2018, at 6, 11-20 (summarizing state initiatives). States must
cautiously consider a "checldist" of factors that Wayfair implied were important. Id. at 11; see
also Wayfair, 138 S. Ct. at 2098 (emphasizing that South Dakota's statute provided
"protection" for "small merchants").
9. Id. at 496-97.
1o. For a discussion of this bifurcation, see Walter Hellerstein, Jurisdiction to Tax Income and
Consumption in the New Economy: A Theoretical and ComparativePerspective, 38 GA. L. REV.1, 4
(2003) (noting that "substantive jurisdiction to tax and enforcement jurisdiction" are not "air-
tight categories").
11. See Wayfair, 138 S. Ct. at 2087 ("All concede that taxing the sales in question here is lawful.").
WAYFAIR UNDERMINES NICASTRO
neither know nor care about their compliance obligations. 12 Before Wayfair, the
Court had interpreted the Commerce Clause to foreclose imposing burdens on
sellers who lacked a "physical presence" in the taxing state.13 Wayfair removed
this impediment to effective tax enforcement, raising a question about whether
the Court should reconsider other judicially imposed obstacles to effective
extraterritorial enforcement of valid state laws.
Justice Kennedy's exaltation of state interests in Wayfair is strikingly
inconsistent with his 2011 plurality opinion rejecting personal jurisdiction inj.
McIntyre Machinery,Ltd. v. Nicastro.14 The Nicastro plurality held that New Jersey
lacked jurisdiction over the manufacturer of an allegedly defective product that
maimed a local worker despite the state's "strong" regulatory interest.i" Scholars
have extensively criticized Nicastro, describing the plurality opinion as
"territoriality on steroids" 16 and a "retrogressive" boon for manufacturers at the
expense of consumers.17 Lower courts hoping for guidance from the fractured
decision have instead encountered "a bit of mystery."" A close reading of Wayfair
and Nicastro reveals several inconsistencies that call for reconsidering the Court's
approach to personal jurisdiction. For example, the decisions rely on conflicting
approaches to the relevance of state interests, fairness, market dynamics, and
outlier fact patterns.
This Essay explores connections between Wayfair and Nicastro and makes
two contributions. Part I illuminates overlooked parallels between the evolution
of constitutional limits on state tax authority and personal jurisdiction. Part II
explains why Wayfair warrants rethinking the Court's excessively restrictive
approach to personal jurisdiction.
12. See Hayes R. Holderness, Questioning Quill, 37 VA. TAx REV. 313, 321-22 & n.37 (2018). Taxes
remitted by buyers are typically called use taxes, while taxes remitted by sellers are typically
called sales taxes. Although use taxes and sales taxes are "functionally equivalent," 2 JEROME
R. HELLERSTEIN ET AL., STATE TAXATION 16.ol[2] (3d ed. 2018), the Court has fostered
uncertainty about whether formal differences affect the application of constitutional
standards. See Adam Thimmesch et al., Wayfair: Sales Tax Formalism and Income Tax Nexus,
2018 ST. TAx NOTES 975, 975-76. I refer to use taxes and sales taxes interchangeably without
expressing a view about whether subtle differences might matter in some circumstances.
13. Quill Corp. v. North Dakota, 504 U.S. 298, 314 (1992).
A. Conceptual Similarities
At first glance, questions about the scope of state authority seem to require
different answers in the jurisdiction and tax contexts. For example,
B. DoctrinalEvolution
by nonresidents. 1 Justice Field's opinion observed that state "tax laws.., can
have no extra-territorial operation"22 because
property lying beyond the jurisdiction of the State is not a subject upon
which her taxing power can be legitimately exercised ....The power of
taxation, however vast in its character and searching in its extent, is
necessarily limited to subjects within the jurisdiction of the State ....So
far as they are held by non-residents of the State, they are property
beyond the jurisdiction of the State.23
One year later, in Galpin v.Page, Justice Field reiterated (without citing) this
territorial approach when he defined the scope of a state's personal jurisdiction:
The tribunals of one State have no jurisdiction over the persons of other
States unless found within their territorial limits; they cannot extend
their process into other States, and any attempt of the kind would be
treated in every other forum as an act of usurpation without any binding
efficacy.24
23. Id. at 319-20. This language was dictum because the corporation's treasurer collected the tax
within the state by deducting it from payments to nonresidents. The Court therefore rested
its holding on the Contracts Clause. See id. at 326 (holding that the state could not interfere
with contractually required interest payments).
24. 85 U.S. (18 Wall.) 350, 367 (1873).
25. U.S. CONST. amend. XIV,§ 1.
26. See Union Tank Line Co. v. Wright, 249 U.S. 275, 282 (1919) ("A state may not tax property
belonging to a foreign corporation which has never come within its borders -to do so under
any formula would violate the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment."); Pennoyer
v.Neff, 95 U.S. 714, 727-28 (1878) (holding that a nonresident defendant's ownership of
property in the forum is not a sufficient basis for personal jurisdiction); id. at 733 (citing the
Due Process Clause).
WAYFAIR UNDERMINES NICASTRO
27. See Milliken v. Meyer, 311 U.S. 457, 462 (1940) ("Domicile in the state is alone sufficient to
bring an absent defendant within the reach of the state's jurisdiction for the purposes of a
personal judgment by means of appropriate substituted service.").
28. Union Refrigerator Transit Co. v. Kentucky, 199 U.S. 194,205 (19o5). The Court justified the
domicile state's taxation of intangible property in part because of territorial limits on personal
jurisdiction that would have prevented other states from collecting the tax. See id.
29. See Dewey v. Des Moines, 173 U.S. 193, 202-03 (1899).
30. See id. (citing Pennoyer). The Court recently granted certiorari in a case that may revisit due
process constraints on state authority when a nonresident holds property for the benefit of a
resident. See Kimberley Rice Kaestner 1992 Family Trust v. N.C. Dep't of Revenue, 814 S.E.2d
43, 51 (N.C. 2018) (holding that the Due Process Clause barred North Carolina from taxing
the undistributed income of an out-of-state trust even though the trust's beneficiaries resided
in North Carolina), cert. granted, 87 U.S.L.W. 3274 (U.S. Jan. 11, 2019) (No. 18-457).
31. 326 U.S. 310 (1945).
32. 307 U.S. 357 (1939). In Curry, a grantor in Tennessee transferred stocks and bonds to a trustee
in Alabama. Id. at 360. When the grantor died in Tennessee, her will distributed the trust
assets. Id. at 361. Both states claimed authority to tax the distributed property based on
connections to either the decedent or the trust. Id. Although stocks and bonds are physical
documents, the Court characterized them as "paper evidences" of "intangibles." Id.
33. Curry, 307 U.S. at 367; Shoe, 326 U.S. at 316.
THE YALE LAW JOURNAL FORUM February 5, 2019
presence,3 4 (2) reject "mechanical" tests of due process,3" (3) justify state power
in part because regulated entities received the "benefit" and "protection" of state
law,36 and (4) emphasize that the state's regulatory interests provide a
foundation for asserting authority.3 7
Subsequent decisions - most notably Quill Corp. v. North Dakota38 - clarified
that the due process inquiry in personal jurisdiction and state tax authority cases
converged, at least at an abstract level. In both contexts, Quill held that due
process required "minimum contacts" between the state and an entity subject to
its authority.39 The Court's decisions in tax cases occasionally cited personal
jurisdiction cases, 40 and vice versa.4 1
The vague "minimum contacts" test offered minimum guidance to judges.
Efforts to implement it can be described charitably as multifaceted and more
accurately as muddled. But some parallel themes emerged in personal
jurisdiction and state tax authority cases.42 Analyzing contacts often required
examining the "nature and extent" of the regulated party's local activities,43 the
correlation between "protection" that a state provided and obligations it
imposed,44 and the state's regulatory interest.45 Personal jurisdiction cases also
emphasized that an actor's contacts with the forum state must be "purposeful."46
Tax cases generally did not emphasize purpose, presumably because purpose was
obvious when the regulated actor knew where transactional counterparties were
located.47 In contrast, when an out-of-state merchant did not know or control a
product's destination, the Court rejected both state tax authority4 8 and personal
jurisdiction.4 9
Although constitutional limits on personal and tax jurisdiction evolved in
parallel, an important twist involving the Commerce Clause complicates analysis
of the sales taxes upheld in Wayfair. Until 1992, the Supreme Court's
interpretation of both the Due Process and Commerce Clauses anachronistically
prohibited states from enforcing sales and use taxes against merchants who
lacked sufficient "presence" in the taxing state.5 0 In 1992, the Court partially
changed course in Quill, which considered whether North Dakota could require
a vendor to collect use taxes arising from sales of office supplies to customers in
the state. 1 The vendor argued that it was beyond the reach of North Dakota's
authority because it lacked a local presence and instead transacted business by
mail and telephone.5 2 The Court held that the Due Process Clause did not
44. Wisconsin v. J.C. Penney Co., 311 U.S. 435, 444 (1940) (tax jurisdiction); accord Hanson, 357
U.S. at 253 (personal jurisdiction).
45. See McGee v. Int'l Life Ins., 355 U.S. 220, 223 (1957) (acknowledging the state's "manifest
interest" in exercising personal jurisdiction); Miller Bros. v. Maryland, 347 U.S. 340, 343
(1954) (noting potential justifications for "experimental" tax innovations).
46. Hanson, 357 U.S. at 253.
47. See Quill Corp. v. North Dakota, 504 U.S. 298, 308 (1992) (devoting only two paragraphs of
analysis to the apparently simple question of whether a merchant who sold to local buyers
"purposefully directed its activities" toward the taxing state).
58. Wayfair left open the possibility that "some other principle" could limit state authority and
that merchants with very low sales volumes could be immune from tax obligations. Id. at
2099.
59. See J. McIntyre Mach., Ltd. v. Nicastro, 564 U.S. 873, 879, 887 (2011) (plurality opinion).
6o. See Erbsen, supra note 8. Thus, although the Court often observes that different issues animate
constitutional limits on legislative and adjudicative jurisdiction, see, e.g., Nicastro, 564 U.S. at
885-86 (plurality opinion), that observation invites questions about the magnitude and
materiality of any differences, see Allan Erbsen, PersonalJurisdictionBased on the Local Effects of
Intentional Misconduct, 57 WM. & MARY L. REv. 385, 431-39 (2015) (considering potential
intersections between doctrines governing extraterritorial legislation and personal
jurisdiction).
WAYFAIR UNDERMINES NICASTRO
are "closely related"61 and generate "parallel"62 inquiries.63 Even beyond the tax
context, personal jurisdiction doctrine occasionally implicates the Commerce
Clause.64 Second, doctrines interpreting both clauses share a similar history.
Supreme Court decisions from the 1920s and 1930s denied "jurisdiction" over
defendants due to the "necessities of commerce."6 These cases relied on the
Commerce Clause to serve a function that the Court later allocated to the Due
Process Clause. Meanwhile, the Commerce Clause's role as a constraint on state
tax authority evolved in parallel with Due Process Clause jurisprudence, but the
Court's decisions before Quill often failed to distinguish between the two
clauses.66 And as noted above, Chief Justice Stone helped nudge both Due
Process Clause and Commerce Clause jurisprudence away from stilted formal
tests and toward practical consideration of competing interests. 67 Third, Wayfair
61. Nat'l Bellas Hess, Inc. v. Dep't of Revenue, 386 U.S. 753, 756 (1967).
62. MeadWestvaco Corp. v. Ill. Dep't of Revenue, 553 U.S. 16,24 (2008).
63. Quill's holding that the Commerce Clause foreclosed taxes that satisfied due process stressed
differences between the two inquiries, especially that "while Congress has plenary power to
regulate commerce among the States and thus may authorize state actions that burden
interstate commerce ... it does not similarly have the power to authorize violations of the Due
Process Clause." Quill, 504 U.S. at 305. Quill understated Congress's power to authorize
personal jurisdiction. See Allan Erbsen, Impersonaljurisdiction,6o EMORY L.J. 1, 75-88 (2010)
(contending that the Constitution empowers Congress to address the optimal scope of the
states' personal jurisdiction).
64. See Bendix Autolite Corp. v. Midwesco Enter., 486 U.S. 888, 895 (1988) (observing that a
state statute requiring a corporation to consent to general jurisdiction as a condition of doing
business in the state may impose "an unreasonable burden on commerce").
65. Int'l Milling Co. v. Columbia Transp. Co., 292 U.S. 511, 518 (1934); see also Davis v. Farmers'
Coop. Equity Co., 262 U.S. 312, 317 (1923) ("[O]rderly, effective administration of justice
clearly does not require that a foreign carrier shall submit to a suit in a State in which the cause
of action did not arise, in which the transaction giving rise to it was not entered upon, in
which the carrier neither owns nor operates a railroad, and in which the plaintiff does not
reside."); Denver & Rio Grande W. R.R. v. Terte, 284 U.S. 284, 287 (1932) (following Davis);
Mich. Cent. R.R. v. Mix, 278 U.S. 492, 494-95 (1929) (same); Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe
Ry. v. Wells, 265 U.S. 101, 103 (1924) (same). Chief Justice Stone recharacterized these cases
as addressing "venue" rather than jurisdiction. S. Pac. Co. v. Arizona ex rel. Sullivan, 325 U.S.
761, 781 (1945).
66. See John A. Swain, State Income Tax Jurisdiction:A jurisprudentialand PolicyPerspective,45 WM.
& MARY L. REv. 319, 322 (2003) ("Until [Quill], the Court had not indicated that the Due
Process and Commerce Clause nexus standards diverged in any meaningful way.").
67. See supra notes 31-37; Int'l Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U.S. 310, 319 (1945) ("Whether due
process is satisfied must depend.., upon the quality and nature of the activity in relation to
the fair and orderly administration of the laws which it was the purpose of the due process
clause to insure."). Compare Di Santo v. Pennsylvania, 273 U.S. 34, 44 (1927) (Stone, J.,
dissenting) (rejecting a "mechanical" Commerce Clause jurisprudence of "labels" in favor of
considering "all the facts and circumstances"), with Raymond Motor Transp., Inc. v. Rice, 434
THE YALE LAW JOURNAL FORUM February 5, 2019
and Nicastro both relied heavily on abstract contentions about state power rather
than technical inquiries into obscure elements of doctrine. Inconsistencies
between Justice Kennedy's analysis in the two cases therefore raise questions
about Nicastro's continuing vitality. Just as the due process holding in Quill
precipitated the Commerce Clause holding in Wayfair, Wayfair's Commerce
Clause holding should precipitate reconsideration of Nicastro's due process
holding.
U.S. 429, 441 (1978) (citing Justice Stone's dissent in Di Santo and holding that Commerce
Clause analysis "involves a sensitive consideration" of several factors).
68. See J. McIntyre Mach., Ltd. v. Nicastro, 564 U.S. 873, 895-98 (2011) (Ginsburg, J., dissenting).
69. See id. at 894.
70. See World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson, 444 U.S. 286, 297-98 (1980) (endorsing in
dicta personal jurisdiction based on direct sales of "defective merchandise" to the forum);
McGee v. Int'l Life Ins. Co., 355 U.S. 220, 223 (1957) (upholding jurisdiction based on a single
intentional transaction, coupled with ancillary interactions, in the forum state).
71. See Nicastro, 564 U.S. at 896 n.2 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting).
72. However, jurisdictional discovery may have been inadequate. See Miller, supra note 17, at 351
(observing that "the record was deficient on certain possibly critical matters that might have
affected the view of one or more of the Justices").
WAYFAIR UNDERMINES NICASTRO
jurisdiction cases. However, as Wayfair notes, the two inquiries are "closely
related,'8 1 and the Court's analysis of personal jurisdiction before Nicastro often
prioritized state interests.8 2 Accordingly, if South Dakota's interests justified
taxation of nonresident merchants, then New Jersey's interests could have
justified jurisdiction over nonresident manufacturers and should not have been
so casually dismissed.
The possibility that Wayfair affects only merchants who engage in a larger
volume of local business than the manufacturer in Nicastro cannot support the
Court's inconsistent approach to state interests.83 The record is not clear, but
arguably the volume of local sales in Nicastro was almost identical to the
minimum threshold that the Court upheld in Wayfair.84 Even if Wayfair requires
a greater volume of local sales than occurred in Nicastro, sales volumes are
irrelevant when considering whether states have an interest in regulating
particular transactions, as opposed to considering whether regulations impose
excessive burdens. Analyzing a state's assertion of power over nonresidents
requires considering two sides of an equation: the state's reason for acting and
the consequences of its action. A regulatory interest may be a good reason to
impose tax obligations and to exercise personal jurisdiction even when the
volume of local business is small.85 But exercising power over an entity based on
This principle helped explain why states regulating a modern economy may tax
sales through the internet in the same way as sales through competing physical
outlets. Extending Wayfair's functional approach to personal jurisdiction
undermines Nicastro's emphasis on directly targeting the forum. In the real
world, manufacturers of industrial machinery do not necessarily target
individual states. They target the entire country. Indeed, the manufacturer in
Nicastro attended national rather than state-specific sales conventions and told
its distributor "[a] 11we wish to do is sell our products in the [United] States-
and get paid!"9 States seeking to hold manufacturers accountable for injuries
caused by defective products therefore must be able to reach defendants who did
not focus on that individual state's market. If one takes Wayfair's functional
approach seriously, then Nicastro's emphasis on direct sales and state-specific
targeting seems needlessly myopic.
Of course, Wayfair does not formally hold that targeting an individual state
is irrelevant because the merchants in Wayfair presumably did target South
Dakota. 96 However, that targeting does not animate the Court's holding. To see
why, suppose that the Delaware-based Acme Corporation creates a website that
sells widgets. Acme conducts no marketing beyond buying a single national
television advertisement during the Super Bowl. The advertisement generates a
million sales, including ten thousand sales to residents of South Dakota.
Wayfair's reasoning leads inexorably to the conclusion that South Dakota can
require Acme to collect sales taxes even though Acme's marketing did not
specifically target the state. Yet Nicastro seems to draw a line between entities
that target the forum and entities that target the national market. Wayfair's
97. For further analysis of why the Court's current personal jurisdiction doctrine is flawed, see
Erbsen, supra note 63.
98. See Nicastro, 564 U.S. at 893 (Breyer, J., concurring).
99. See Adam N. Steinman, The Lay of the Land: Examining the Three Opinions in J. McIntyre
Machinery, Ltd. v. Nicastro, 63 S.C. L. REv. 481, 511 (2012) (observing that the concurrence
and the dissent disagreed about whether the manufacturer in fact knew that "potential
customers were likely to exist in the forum state").
ioo. See In re Chinese -Manufactured Drywall Prods. Liab. Litig., 753 F. 3d 521, 541 (5th Cir. 2014)
(holding that Supreme Court precedent regarding the precedential force of plurality opinions
requires focusing on Justice Breyer's narrow concurrence in Nicastro).
THE YALE LAW JOURNAL FORUM February 5, 2019
CONCLUSION
Wayfair and Nicastro address similar scenarios. Both cases involved: (1)
conduct by an entity outside the state (selling/manufacturing); that (2) had
consequences within the state (taxable event/physical injury); which (3)
motivated the state to react by compelling the entity to tale a particular action
(collect a tax/appear in court). Labelling Wayfair as a tax case and Nicastro as a
personal jurisdiction case impedes analysis rather than informing it.
Viewing state tax authority and personal jurisdiction as two related strands
of horizontal federalism jurisprudence reveals historical and conceptual
connections. These connections help illuminate the Supreme Court's
inconsistent assumptions and preferences. In particular, Wayfair's functional,
interest-oriented endorsement of state power is inconsistent with Nicastro'srigid
fixation on targeted contacts. The Court should invoke Wayfair to reconsider
Nicastro'sexcessive limit on state authority.
More generally, the Court should be wary of its tendency to construct
doctrinal silos that obscure similarities between horizontal federalism problems.
The Constitution allocates power to and among states in myriad circumstances
using diverse methods. Comparing these contexts rather than addressing them
in isolation can provide a richer understanding of the constitutional values at
stake, the optimal frameworks for analyzing those values, and the factors that
courts should consider.
Allan Erbsen is a Professorof Law at the University of Minnesota Law School. Thanks
to DianaErbsen, Jill Hasday, Amy Monahan, Alan Morrison, and Mark Rosen for
helpful comments.
1o. See Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Court, 137 S. Ct. 1773 (2017) (citing Nicastroonly in
the dissent); Walden v. Fiore, 134 S. Ct. 1115 (2014) (ignoring Nicastro). Two decisions
addressing "general jurisdiction" rather than "specific jurisdiction" also did not cite Nicastro.
BNSF Ry. v. Tyrell, 137 S. Ct. 1549 (2017); Daimler AG v. Bauman, 134 S. Ct. 746, 757 (2015)
(Justice Ginsburg's majority opinion citing only her dissent in Nicastro).
102. Prior to Wayfair, at least two amicus briefs and one commentator noted that Nicastro could be
read as supporting tighter limits on state tax jurisdiction. See Brief for Montana as Amicus
Curiae Supporting Respondents at 10-13, South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc., 138 S. Ct. 2080
(2018) (No. 17-494); Brief of Amicus Curiae Online Merchants Guild in Support of
Respondents at 26-27, Wayfair, 138 S. Ct. 2080 (2018) (No. 17-494); Brannon P. Denning,
Due Processand PersonalJurisdiction:Implicationsfor State Taxes, 2012 ST. TAX NOTES 837, 841.
The fact that Wayfair expanded state authority highlights the importance of revisiting
elements of Nicastro that suggested a different trajectory.