Untitled Document

JNOV: Judgment Non Obstante Veredicto

Notwithstanding the Verdict

Wednesday, 31 August 2005

Judicial Review on Bench Memos
Posted by Pennoyer V. Neff on Wednesday, 31 August 2005, at 02:53 pm. 0 Trackbacks

Matthew Franck, Robert Alt, Mark R. Levin, Robby George and Gerard Bradley had a lively discussion last week regarding the constitutional basis for judicial review on the National Review's Bench Memos blog. Though the participants seem to be a bit nit-picky at times, their points are well-considered and thorough.

The major issue, of course, is the natural conflict between (1) our dislike of "activist judges legislating from the bench" and (2) the thought that, if the courts can't do it, who else will? The Federalists and Anti-Federalists alike agreed that the legislature in itself could not have the final word. After all--constitutional review exists because we have decided that, in favor of a broader national policy, we will not allow some laws to exist simply because a majority of the people (or more accurately a majority of representatives and senators) wish them to be enacted.

Tuesday, 30 August 2005

TLDB II: Anti-Lochnerism

From The Least Dangerous Branch:

“Mr. Roosevelt, as is well known, failed to pack the Court.… But time unpacked it, and… [i]n a few years they cleaned up after the old Court. A great many measures which almost everyone would concede today, denoted social and economic progress had been laid beside the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses, or beside the Commerce Clause, and had been struck down because they were found to be round where they should have been square.” (p. 90)

Published in 1962, I’m quite skeptical that “almost everyone” actually felt the way Bickel did at the time. Even Lochner was less than 60 years old. Pro-regulatory chestnuts like Nebbia and West Coast Hotel were a mere 28 and 25 years old, respectively. That’s less than Roe v. Wade’s current 32-year age, but Roe is still commonly discussed and fairly contentious.

Bickel can be forgiven his hyperbolic “almost everyone” as literary technique, but my belief is that plenty of people actually did believe this was true, simply because Bickel (and others) said it. Learning from Bickel et al, they took these cases to be unassailable. This happens today with Roe, but if it’s truly an unassailable outcome, why do so many fear it will be overturned? What I’m suggesting then, is that Bickel and others, in the late 50s and 60s, turned anti-Lochnerism and regulation, generally, into the jurisprudential equivalent of Roe today.

Next in the series: more on the connection between Roe and Lochner.

Wednesday, 24 August 2005

The Least Dangerous Branch

Least Dangerous Branch: The Supreme Court at the Bar of Politics

I recently re-read Alexander Bickel's The Least Dangerous Branch. It is frequently referenced but actually read much less so. Bickel coined the phrase "the countermajoritarian difficulty" in this and other works. The phrase is used incessantly even today.

This will be the first in a series of posts discussing the book, its contemporaries, and its influence. I was truly amazed, reading the book for the first time since first year constitutional law, at how much of today's constitutional dialogue hearkens back to Bickel, and even uses his language in many instances. Bickel first published the book in 1962.

I am thoroughly convinced that the late 1950s and 1960s marked the most dramatic period for (and shift in) American jurisprudence. This was the era apologia for the New Deal and the Court that remained afterwards, still found in scholarship today. It was also a time of great institutional change in the legal profession and education, enabling this movement to instantiate itself in students (especially at Yale, Bickel’s home) that would become the next generation of influential scholars-- those still around today.

I don't mean to deify Bickel, or to attack him. But I think this book can reasonably be seen (and is by many of all political stripes) as a bulwark of modern Supreme Court thought. Bickel most definitely raises a number of original and thoughtful points. My thought, however, is that too many people actually did deify him and were too quick to embrace what he said. Some his major ideas have been critically discussed at length in the literature. But what worries me is the embrace of what Bickel and his contemporaries subtly interjected throughout their work: revisionist history and hyperbole that disparaged and marginalized anyone that did not worship at the altar of the New Deal, including those that were generally approving, yet not so smitten.

But first a few book review-type comments. It's dreadfully boring. I hesitate to go so far as to say it's poorly written, but it drags on forever in sometimes terribly awkward prose. The book has been so profoundly influential (you see countless cites in many con law casebooks and articles even today) and thus should be read by anybody that wants to really understand the origins of modern theories of the Supreme Court, but I'm not sure how it ever got to be so popular being as dull as it is.

Notwithstanding its inability to draw in the reader, though, the book is pretty well organized, starting with the general, common justification for the establishment of judicial review, moving on to specific aspects of the Court's power and lack thereof, ending up with a detailed discussion in the context of the School Segregation Cases (Brown v. Board of Education and its companions). These cases are also referred to, in much less detail, throughout the book.

The next post will discuss Bickel's depiction of the New Deal Court.