Therefore,
I’m going to write a little on this landmark case, extensively quoting from
Justice Scalia’s brilliant dissenting opinion. This is the first post of two.
But before I do that, do a quick read of what this case was all about (and what it wasn't about).
So,
let’s talk first about the first aspect of this case. From Scalia:
This case is about power in several respects.
It is about the power of our people to govern themselves, and the power of this
Court to pronounce the law. Today’s opinion aggrandizes the latter [the Supreme
Court], with the predictable consequence of diminishing the former [Yours]. We
[the Supremes] have no power to decide this case. And even if we did, we have
no power under the Constitution to invalidate this democratically adopted legislation.
The Court’s errors on both points spring forth from the same diseased root: an
exalted conception of the role of this institution in America . (1)
That’s
the argument: the Supreme Court overstepped its bounds. But how? Let’s dive in!
They [the People of the US] gave judges, in
Article III [of the Constitution], only the “judicial Power,” a power to decide
not abstract questions but real, concrete “Cases” and “Controversies.” (1-2)
Scalia
is laying the foundation here that the Supreme Court exists, as established by
the Constitution, to address actual cases. What is an actual case? It is case
where at least two parties have a disagreement. This sounds stupid,
common-sensical, but this is what is at issue. (Oy.)
So,
with actual cases, lower courts usually remedy the disagreement between the two
parties. Only when the disagreement continues after the lower courts does the
case comes before the Supreme Court. Scalia writes that the matter was settled
in the lower courts. So, he writes:
the plaintiff [Windsor] and the Government
agree entirely on what should happen in this lawsuit. They agree that the court
below got it right; and they agreed in the court below that the court below
that one got it right as well. What, then, are we doing here? (2)
The
answer to the question is that the other judges of the Supreme Court believe
that the Constitution disagrees with DOMA (an act of congress) and that, in
this disagreement, it is the “province and duty” of the judicial branch—in this
case, the Supreme Court—to “say what the law is.” (2). Scalia is shocked by
that line of argument because
It is an assertion of [the Judicial Branch’s] supremacy over the
people’s Representatives in Congress [who passed DOMA] and the Executive [that is, the President who signed the bill]. It
envisions a Supreme Court standing (or rather enthroned) at the apex of
government, empowered to decide all constitutional questions, always and
everywhere “primary” in its role. [As opposed to being
co-equal with the other two branches of government]. (2)
Scalia
notes how the founders established this separation of power so that the people’s
right to self-rule would be guarded and that they would be protected from “the
black-robed supremacy” of the judicial branch.
And
so Scalia insists that
For this reason [of guarding and protecting the people] we are
quite forbidden to say what the law is whenever “‘an Act of Congress is alleged
to conflict with the Constitution.’” (3)
But,…
wait. I thought that was the role of the
Supreme Court…
It
is, but there is a requirement for it. Scalia explains:
We can do so only when that allegation will determine the outcome of
a lawsuit, and is contradicted by the other party. (3)
So,
the Supreme Court can only say what the law is when the allegation will
determine the outcome of a lawsuit, AND is contradicted by the other party.
Since the plantiff, Windsor, and the US Government have AGREED in this case,
Scalia rightly argues that the Supreme Court has no place to hear this “case”
because there is no contradiction by the other party:
Neither party [Windsor or the US Government] sought to undo the
judgment for Windsor ,
and so that [lower] court should have dismissed the appeal (just as we [the
Supreme Court] should dismiss this case) for lack of jurisdiction. (5)
Therefore,
The question here is not whether, as the majority puts it, “the United States
retains a stake
sufficient to support Article III jurisdiction,” ibid. The question
is whether there is any controversy [that is, contradiction] between the United States
and Ms. Windsor. There is not. (7-8)
Scalia
then notes that to do what the Supreme Court is doing by hearing this case has
no precedent
We have never before agreed to speak—to “say what the law
is”—where there is no controversy before us. In the more than two centuries
that this Court has existed as an institution, we have never suggested that we
have the power to decide a question when every party agrees with both its
nominal opponent and the court below on that question’s answer. The [lawyers of
the] United States
reluctantly conceded that at oral argument. (5)
Good
point.
in
fact, past precedent dictates that the case be dismissed. Scalia notes the
opinion of Chief Justice Taney in Lord v. Veazie in 1850 who, when confronted
with two parties who agreed but who were pushing for the court to “say what the
law is,” said:
The whole proceeding was in contempt of the court, and highly
reprehensible . . . . A judgment in form, thus procured, in the eye of the law
is no judgment of the court. It is a
nullity, and no writ of error will lie upon it. This writ is,
therefore, dismissed.” (11)
This
concerns Scalia: why isn’t this court today considering past precedent and the
ordinary understanding of the balance of power?
Scalia
then goes so far as to wonder out loud about whether the other justices have a
malicious intent about hearing this case: that is, to set a precedent for the
Supreme Court itself: and that precedent is to “say what the law is” even when
it doesn’t have the power to do so, and secondarily, to universally make precedent
same-sex unions.
The further proceedings have been a contrivance, having no object
in mind except to elevate a District Court judgment that has no precedential effect
in other courts, to one that has precedential effect throughout the Second
Circuit, and then (in this Court) precedential effect throughout the United
States. (5)
Scalia
is calling this whole charade a power-grab.
He
continues his critique by noting how the justices rationalized their decision.
He says that they “relegate[d] a jurisdictional requirement” to the level of
being simply a matter of “prudence,” which in turn, he says “enabl[es] courts
to ignore the requirement whenever they believe it “prudent”—which is to say, a
good idea.”
In
other words, the justices side-stepped actual law and precedent, citing reasons
of prudence—which is just another way of relativizing law so as to get what one
wants.
Scalia
takes offense at this. He says,
the existence of a controversy [in a case] is not a “prudential”
requirement that we have invented, but an essential element of an
Article III case or controversy. [What the other justices have done is] a breathtaking
revolution in our Article III jurisprudence. (9)
Yikes.
Scalia
cites a 1968 court case (Flast v. Cohen) that employed the same argument,
saying that
We have been living with the chaos created by that power-grabbing
decision ever since, [see Hein v. Freedom From Religion Foundation, Inc.,(2007)],
as we will have to live with the chaos created by this one. (8)
Ouch.
So,
what should have happened? Scalia writes that Congress passed DOMA in 1996. President
Clinton (!) signed DOMA into law. Now President Clinton, if he felt the law was
constitutional, had a right to refuse to sign DOMA into law. At which point,
the [lower] District Court could not have refereed this friendly
scrimmage, and the [President’s] determination of unconstitutionality would
have escaped this Court’s [the Supreme’s] desire to blurt out its view of the
law. The matter would have been left, as so many matters ought to be left, to a
tug of war between the President and the Congress, which has innumerable means
(up to and including impeachment) of compelling the President to enforce the
laws it has written. (10)
That
would have been the correct way to address the issue under the Constitution.
If majorities in both Houses of Congress care enough about the
matter, they have available innumerable ways to compel executive action without
a lawsuit—from refusing to confirm Presidential appointees to the elimination
of funding. (Nothing says “enforce the Act” quite like “. . . or you will have
money for little else.”) But the condition is crucial; Congress must care
enough to act against the President itself, not merely enough to instruct its
lawyers to ask us to do so. (14)
Because the Supreme Court has amassed to itself too much power, this confrontation no longer (or, will no longer) exists. Thus, a new branch of government will arise: lawyers. And that's what the world needs, right? More lawyers? Yes,
Placing the Constitution’s entirely anticipated political arm wrestling into permanent judicial receivership does not do the system a favor. (14)
So, that's the first part. Check back for part two when I discuss the same-sex union aspect of this.....
Placing the Constitution’s entirely anticipated political arm wrestling into permanent judicial receivership does not do the system a favor. (14)
So, that's the first part. Check back for part two when I discuss the same-sex union aspect of this.....
The media is not reporting the gravity of the interpretation but I am sure is reveling in it. Obtaining justice was difficult before this, now it will be impossible. I predict pressure on appointments will take on an even greater magnitude of importance than before. This is extremely dangerous to our governance. Should we be surprised, or not?
ReplyDelete