ELEMENTS OF THE LAW
Professor Strauss
Fall 1999
GENERAL : THE ROLE OF JUDGES
- Common Law
- J responsibility to create and maintain a legitimate body of workable common law
- Must do so carefully
- Future judges will have to rely on it: hard to apply?
- Individuals will have to follow it: hard to figure out? Too general/overinclusive?
- Individualized justice vs. general application and predictability
- Statutory Laws
- L responsibility to create laws
- J responsibility: interpret? Articulate? Specify? Build up/broaden? Or just “apply?
- L can amend – take too long?
PRECEDENT, FORMALISM & LEGAL REALISM
- CHANGE V. CONSISTENCY
- Arguments to change a rule
- Fairness
-Old rule might have an unjust result due to unforeseen circumstances
- Update outdated rule
-Old rule might no longer be legitimate or fair due to changed public sentiment
-Society circumstances/technology changed?
- Flexibility of law
-Formal, uniform application of rigid rules may become oppressive
- Lack of applicability or decisive precedent. Fill in holes
- Hindsight – articulate emergence of principle
- Judicial activism, “I see it now!”
- Arguments to keep a rule the same
- Slippery Slope – too much change will make law in general unpredictable
- Incoherent, complicated web of rules are unworkable for judges
- Too many exceptions hollow rule out?
- Judicial restraint, humility to past
- Past decisions may be misused/re-interpreted to justify change
- Predictability, certainty, consistency of law as stated and applied
- PARTICULAR CASE DECISIONS V. GENERAL RULE DECISIONS
- Particular Cases Alone
- Why Good?
- Individualized fairness for each instance
- Recognizes complexity of world
- Flexibility of justice
- Individual discretion of judges
- Judge’s role = only to decide cases before them
- Why Bad?
- Hard to follow, unpredictable
-people’s circs might be different. How do cases apply to them?
- Hard to enforce
-police, etc. won’t know who has done wrong, right
-May lead to over/underinclusive arrests/enforcement
- Judicial resources?
-People may see uncertainty as a reason to sue (or appeal)
-Too many people demanding “justice” in their case
- Complicated web of rules
-Insiders/experts will only know all laws
-Hard for everyone to keep up w/a growing laundry list of rules
- 3rd Party effects
-People don’t have incentive to act “right” – there is no case against them in past
- Eventually accomplish the same thing a general rule would have anyways
- Particular Cases as Precedent
- Why Good?
- Activism
-Systemic activism
-Gives future judges freedom to do justice in each case
-(But this allows individual indulgences/discretion)
- Constraint
-Systemic constraint
-Make as little law as possible in each case to prevent future injustice
-Forces judges to just keep eyes on one case
-Limits discretion to just one case
- Why Bad?
- “Hard cases make bad law” -- Winterbottom v. Wright (Rolfe)
-Bad precedents come from close cases
-Circumstances of a particular case may arouse sympathies of a J
-A rule which applies for one particular, narrow set of circumstances is difficult to apply to other cases
- Complicated web of individual rules becomes unworkable in application
- Too much discretion allowed in each case
- General Rules Alone
- Why Good?
- Predictability
-Simple, general rules are easy to follow
-People don’t need to be legal experts or insiders to know whether their acts are allowed
- Consistency
-Broad rules won’t have to be changed as often
- 3rd party effects
-People will make sure to act according to the letter of the law
-Product makers will have incentive to make safe, good products
- Judicial Role
-Legislatures can’t make laws for everything. Judges fill in holes
- Why Bad?
- Overinclusion
-Too many people will fall under broad rules
- Underinclusion
-In a generally permissable activiey, doesn’t allow for the circs of a case to get someone who really is doing wrong
- Unpredictability
-Creates uncertainty as to how the rule will really be applied
-3rd party effects =
Too much litigation – judicial resources constrained
Incentives to act decrease – people afraid of being sued, stop driving carriages or making diving boards
- Judicial resources
-Expansion of suits – over-inclusion of circumstances will give people too much ground for litigation
- 3rd party implications for expansion of suits
-may ruin incentive for product if liability is too broad, like diving boards
- Judicial role
-Only legislatures should make broad rules of law
- General Rules as Precedent
- Why Good?
- Predictable
-Easy for judges to apply
- Judicial restraint
-Judges deciding particular cases bound by previous rules made governing the category
-Judges can’t give in to discretionary whims
- Why Bad?
- Over/Underinclusive
- Unjust or harsh results may result
-Strict application to all individual cases may force unjust decisions
- Exceptions will be made
-Judges will have to make exceptions to do justice
-If we allow this case to create an exception, what will result?
-Many more exceptions requested?
-Too many exceptions hollow out the rule
- Unpredicatability
-Every rule is subject to interpretation
-Exceptions may be made which don’t acknowledge true rationale
-Will everyone get exceptions? No one knows
C. Common Law Development: Generalizing from Particular Cases
1.Evolutionary development of common law
a. General
- “Common Thread” (Cardozo in MacPherson v. Buick)
-See real rule underlying lots of past decisions emerge
-Articulate principle underlying collective reasoning
-Create general rules from particular cases
b.Example:
Product Liability and the “Inherently Dangerous” Rule: cases leading to MacPherson
- Winterbottom v. Wright
-Stage Coach
-No 3rd party product liability
- Longmeid v. Holiday
-Lamp
-3rd party liability if inherently dangerous
- Thomas v. Winchester
-Drugs = inherently dangerous
-3rd party liability if inherently dangerous by nature/ordinary use
- Loop v. Litchfield
-Fly-wheel = not inherently dangerous
-3rd party liability if inherently dangerous by nature but not if tested properly
- Lossee v. Clute
-Boiler = not inherently dangerous
- Statler v. George Ray Manufacturing
-Coffee Urn = inherently dangerous
-3rd party liability if foreseen use is inherently dangerous when the product is negligently made
- MacPherson
-Car
-Inherently dangerous rule replaced – unworkable, too hard to apply
-New rule: Foreseeability of injury test:
3rd party liability if 3rd party use is foreseeable and is constructed negligently in a way that will cause 3rd party injury, regardless of inherent danger
-Articulating underlying principle of past cases
-Reinterpretation of past cases in light of subsequent developments
-Still trying to frame his rule in precedent. Not acknowledging change of rule
- Role of Judge
a.Why is Judicial Activism Good?
- Acknowledgement of reality
-All decisions are activist bc all decisions are subject to interpretation
-Better to acknowledge activism than to hide it
- Precedents may fail
-Past decisions may become unworkable
-Past decisions may be leading to harsh or unjust results
- Society’s Conditions Change
-Judges must continuously update past decisions to ensure that they are in keeping with
society’s changing conditions
- Predictability
-Trying to stick religiously with old rules but making them come out “right” takes away predictability of precedent because the underlying rationale is hidden
-Articulate underlying principle to encourage predictability for people to follow and judges to apply
- Limited in nature
-Not needed often
-Most cases are not significant enough that activism matters
- Judge’s role
-Common law is to articulate clear rules and standards
-Rules may seem clear but need clarification in application
-Too many different rules may exist – one principle needed
b.Why is Judicial Restraint Good?
- Common law theory = adherence to precedent
- Predictability
-Keep rules constant so people and judges can plan and apply
- Judge’s role
-J must only decide case at hand according to past rules, not create bodies of law
-J role is to apply law, not create it. “Just do law”
-Legislatures only should articulate broad rules if needed
- Humility
-What makes judges think they can decide something better than someone else?
- Rule of law, not rule of men
-Minimize discretion
-Js are subject to bias, preferences, ideals, agenda
D.WHY FOLLOW PRECEDENT?
- Collective wisdom
- Knowledge, experience & judgement of many built up over time and reflected in precedent
- Better than individual judge w/ single perspective
- Humility, defer to the many. Don’t be arrogant
- Predictability
- People need to be able to plan ahead, shape affairs
- Even if old rule is wrong, don’t make sudden changes
- Equality/Fairness
- Similarly situated people should be treated the same
- Consistency -- Legitimacy of System
- Maintain respect for laws & the system
- Why NOT to follow precedent?
- Precedent may be mistake of the past – don’t preserve and perpetuate errors/injustice
- Don’t blindly rely on old rules
- Where did rule originate? Accident? Good?
- Judges avoid precedent covertly anyways
- Lessons of past may be ambiguous
- Can search for a tradition or “rule” that justifies what they want and rely on it
- To preserve legitimacy, must acknowledge what they are doing
- Sudden and drastic changes may be warranted
- I.e. abolition of slavery in State v. Post
- FORMALISM
- Law as a Science
- Systemic
- Rules established, observations made (cases decided), anomalies build up around them, then they break down
- New explanations needed, new rules discovered
- Create a workable framework to organize cases
- Methodology
- Particular facts and intuitions like scientific observations
- Can’t know right and wrong right away. Must experiment
- Law is the formal application of rules to specific cases
- Goals
- Trying to articulate an underlying, discoverable theory : Truth & Justice
- LEGAL REALISM
- Law as Dynamic
- “Certainty generally is illusion, and repose is not the destiny of man” (Holmes)
- Practice of law is not just a straightforward application of rules
-Even practical, problem-solving approach requires choices and judgments
-But can be done in a principled way
- Judges as Scientist-Legislators
-Keep goals of law in mind
-Keep social science/statistics in mind
-Be impartial… but be careful…
-Does its extreme de-humanize law?
- Law not 100% Scientific
- Judge’s intuitions, values, choices inevitably are a part of decisions
COERCION, CONSENT & CONTRACT: THE NATURE OF FREE CHOICE
(Freedom of Contract and its Limitations)
A.POLICE POWER OF STATE
- Promote General Welfare of Society
- Health and safety, general welfare implications of K (Lochner)
- Protect Society from Externalities
- Social costs of individual decisions may outweigh benefit of individual free choice (Green v. County School Board)
- Protect Individuals from Power Situations
- K may seem to be free choice of each party, but “consent” may not be true consent (Harris v. Forklift Systems)
- Protect Individuals from Own Limited Decisionmaking Capacities
- K may seem to be best choice to individual, but choice may not be rational (Lochner)
B.WHY FREEDOM OF CONTRACT?
- 14th Amendment
- No deprivation of life, liberty or property w/o due process of law
- Individual Autonomy/Right to Self-Determination
- Both parties want to enter into K, should be free to do so
- Hold individuals responsible for own actions
- Allows individual dignity (vs. paternalism)
- Both Parties Benefit
- Why limit something from which both parties benefit?
- Individuals will negotiate for what is in their best interest
- Individuals in society are complex
- Externalities/ Third Party Effects
- Other parties not involved may benefit from K too
- If other parties don’t benefit, it doesn’t matter: the K belongs to the 2 parties only
- Efficiency/Perspective
- Individuals in best position to make decision
- Rulemakers far away shouldn’t judge what is good for them
- Individuals make rational, efficient decisions in own interest
- Laissez-faire Market
- People should be able to bargain for what they want, and give up what they want (even individual dignity/rights)
- Economic freedom of individual
- Let people earn $ premiums for risk/hazard
- 2 assumptions implicit here
-Complete information re: risk & consequences of risk
-Individual valuation of risk reflects valuation of risk to society
- Deciding where to limit invites discretion/arbitrariness
- Why bakers? (Lochner)
- Legislature biased, have alternate interests
- “Public Welfare” not being articulated
- Interest groups are fighting for particular groups – power wins
- Paternalism
- Many arguments for limiting freedom of contract are truly paternalistic
- There are instances in freedom of K where people will make poor decisions, suffer
- Pure freedom of K not 100% optimal in effect
- BUT, it’s better than gov’t limitation!
- Gov’t may be affected by all decision making processes listed below, too. Why are they better/smarter than individuals?
- The best way to confront uncertainty is liberty
C.WHY LIMIT FREEDOM OF K?
- Externalities / Third Party Effects
- Does K affect other parties not involved?
- Obvious 3rd party effects?
- Society/environment affected?
- Moralisms?
- Intangible 3rd party effects
- 3rd parties are psychologically upset/disturbed by K
- How to weigh 3rd party cost v. K’s 2-party benefits?
i.e. costs to women of indv. woman contracting out of sex harrassment liability
- Incapacity
- Poor people tend to be less educated, can’t make as good of decisions
- Some people, individuals in general maybe, can’t make decisions that are good for them
- Human Limitiations
- People not 100% rational in calculating decisions and assessing risks
- People have irrational fears and aversions to certain things
- Information Failure
- Party may not have enough information to understand their situation
- May lack statistics (ie how may bakers died in the US last year? How many coal miners injured?)
- Can’t make informed decision
- OR party may think he has enough info, but doesn’t
- How will party know what is enough info upon which to base a decision
- Risk may mean there is not enough info available
- This makes problem worse
- How to assess risk magnitude, weigh uncertainties w/o full info?
- Asymmetrial Information
- One party may know more about situation than the other
- I.e. how valuable an employee someone is/would be v. her threat of lawsuit/his of liability
- Can lead to irrational, unoptimal K
- Bounded Rationality
Even with all information/stats, people don’t make 100% rational decisions
- Availability
- Look around and see the norm, not the exceptions
- Everyone looks healthy and safe, assume that is the case
- Representativeness
- If no examples are around, risk doesn’t seem real
- Characteristic Mis-Proportionality
- Can’t calculate risk accurately
- We have biased/faulty ways of working things out in our heads
- Example: ST benefits may carry more weight than LT costs bc they are more immediate (i.e. ST economic gains v. LT oppression)
- Think, “Not me”
- Redistribution
- Poor people more likely to accept unsafe and unhealthy conditions for more money
- Thus, poor people more likely to be harmed by such conditions
- Social costs
- these people will be less productive in the LR
- may become disabled, incur welfare and workers comp. costs
- State must protect them
- Can this be accomplished? Unsure
- Collective Action
- Social norms/trends are powerful and hard to overcome
- People may not want to be “the first one” to speak up, to assert selves
- People may not be able to effectively negotiate for their own best interest, bc they will be replaced by others who don’t assert themselves (Lochner?) (sex harassment)
- K limitations may articulate and effectuate what people would really want to choose if they could
- Adaptive Preferences
- Oppressed people may stop wanting what they can’t have
- Too much stress to constantly desire something unattainable
- Only applies to adaptation to unjust circumstances (not just life hardships/disappointments)
- Examples:
- Stockholm Syndrome: hostages didn’t want to be freed. Terrified. We must force them to accept freedom. ST individual safety outweighs individual freedom of choice
- Green v. County School Board, Slavery: Blacks don’t want to go to white schools, slaves don’t want to be freed. Force them to accept choice/freedom (?). LT society benefit outweighs individual freedom of choice
- Monopoly
a.Some market relationships do not offer options
- Crystallization
- Some things (i.e. power differentials) are too diffuse & intangible to address in contracts (i.e. sex harassment in employment contracts)
- MacKinnon
- Trying to address or articulate something unusual or deviant from norm could brand you as a troublemaker, even if you are justified
- Non-Commodification
- Some things cannot/should not be bought or sold
- I.e. dignity (sex harassment), reproductive rights (Surrogate Parenting Assoc. v. KY)
- Human dignity (Marxist alienation of the individual laborer as a commodity)
- Relationships, friendships
- Having to choose between two things may be unfair. Sometimes we don’t want a choice (i.e. sex harrassment, buying v. selling blood, etc.)
- Slippery Slope
- You argue, too, that occupational safety and health hazard cannot be contracted away…
- But these are accepted commodities in our society: “Hazard Pay”
- Commodification changes the nature of a thing/act
D.COERCION
- Coercive Nature of Contracts
- Most contracts are somewhat coercive, pressure party in one way or another
- Most contracts have power imbalances, that’s why we have contracts
- Question is the legitimacy of pressure imposed
- Options
- Coercive pressure for useful purposes might be OK?
- If choices are changed in order to force one decision or another, that is coercive
- I.e. choose between sentence and human drug tester
- If sentence is harsher than it would be w/no choice, coercion!
- Otherwise, indv. is free to choose – in fact, they are being given more options! (even if don’t seem desirable options, they are still options)
- Bargaining Power
- Coercion has more effect on the powerless. Powerful can negotiate
- Powerless = unskilled, replaceable, numerous people (i.e. bakers)
- Powerful = those with leverage (i.e. employers), those with skills (fewer in #, less supply, less easily replaced) (i.e. lawyers)
- Exploitation = abuse of lack of power
- Minimum wage & maximum hours needed for the poor/powerless
- Otherwise, the wage will be driven down and the hours worked up
- People would be forced to accept a condition of very long hours and low pay
- Economic Coercion
- “My poverty, but not my will, consents”
THE DILEMMA OF RULES AND DISCRETION