Western District of Washington sees new filings in Sell v. Home Depot
Sell v. Home Depot Inc. recorded new public docket activity on Feb. 27, 2026, with filings tied to multiple Home Depot-related defendants in the Western District of Washington.

Sell v. Home Depot Inc. et al. registered fresh docket activity in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington on Feb. 27, 2026, according to public dockets aggregated by monitoring services. The entries on that date were logged under the active federal case caption Sell v. Home Depot Inc. et al., which lists multiple Home Depot-related defendants.
The case name Sell v. Home Depot Inc. et al. identifies Home Depot Inc. among the parties, and the Feb. 27 filings were captured by commercial monitoring services that track public federal dockets. The recent entries appear on the case docket for the Western District of Washington, indicating continued procedural movement after prior activity in the matter.
Monitoring services aggregated the Feb. 27, 2026 additions to the public docket; those services flagged the filings as defendant-related and associated with entities described in the docket as Home Depot-related. The identification of multiple Home Depot-related defendants on the same docket reinforces that the complaint and subsequent responses name more than a single corporate party.
The docket activity on Feb. 27, 2026 is the latest recorded entry in the federal action Sell v. Home Depot Inc. et al., which remains pending in the Western District of Washington. Because the entries were made to the public federal docket, the filings are now part of the official case record available through the court system and through the monitoring services that aggregated them.
The presence of new defendant-linked filings on Feb. 27, 2026 signals ongoing litigation steps in Sell v. Home Depot Inc. et al. as the matter proceeds through the Western District of Washington. Parties and counsel listed in the case will be reflected in subsequent docket entries as the litigation continues to develop in federal court.
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