Understanding the First Amendment

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW Washington Law Review Pub Date : 2012-06-01 DOI:10.4135/9781452229843.n2
R. Post
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

It is a rare privilege to be read and engaged by such thoughtful and insightful commentators as the Washington Law Review has assembled. It is exhilarating to participate in a conversation of this range and intensity. I am very grateful to the Washington Law Review, Ronald K.L. Collins and David Skover, and the University of Washington School of Law, for making this symposium possible. As I read the contributions to this symposium, I am put in mind of Oliver Wendell Holmes' famous injunction that "[w]e must think things not words, or at least we must constantly translate our words into the facts for which they stand, if we are to keep to the real and the true."1 Although lawyers love words and language, "the real justification of a rule of law," Holmes argued, "is that it helps to bring about a social end which we desire."2 Holmes' advice was to pay close attention to whether our legal words in fact function to serve our social ends. Nowhere is the disjunction between words and ends more apparent than in First Amendment jurisprudence. We suffer from First Amendment hypertrophy. Doctrine proliferates endlessly and meaninglessly. Around every corner is yet another confusing First Amendment "test." We barely ever stop to ask what social ends are actually served by this barrage of inconsistent and abstract doctrine. We rarely take time to "translate our [First Amendment] words into the facts for which they stand." The illuminating contribution of Bruce E.H. Johnson and Sarah K. Duran3 seems fortunately almost immune from this affliction. Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (SLAPPs) are theoretically interesting precisely because they illustrate the disjunction between legal words and social ends. Plaintiffs bring SLAPP suits to enforce rights created by substantive legal doctrine. Substantive legal doctrine, especially when subject to constitutional standards that determine whether particular speech acts should receive First Amendment immunity, ought accurately to reflect our values. At first blush, therefore, SLAPP suits ought not to be problematic; defendants should prevail whenever constitutional standards provide that their speech deserves constitutional protection. This way of thinking, however, does not pay sufficient attention to how legal standards actually function. It fails to appreciate the transaction costs associated with litigation enforcing substantive doctrine. Defending even an unmeritorious suit can be costly and timeconsuming, and this expense will likely discourage otherwise protected participation in public discussion. The anti-SLAPP statutes Johnson and Duran discuss are designed to address and nullify such transaction costs. They not only shift attorneys' fees, but they also create pathways for the "prompt and inexpensive" resolution of SLAPP suits.4 Johnson and Duran invite us to theorize the actual behavioral effects of enforcing substantive First Amendment standards; they direct our attention to the reality that underlies doctrine. The idea that substantive First Amendment rules should take account of the transaction costs of litigating First Amendment rights is a deep insight. It ultimately derives from the legal realism inspired by Holmes. Johnson and Duran are concerned with how the costs of enforcing First Amendment doctrine affect actual participation in public discourse. The first decision of the U.S. Supreme Court systematically to reason in this way was New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,5 which fashioned the "actual malice" rule precisely to nullify the transaction costs of libel litigation.6 It designed the actual malice rule to anticipate and nullify the "chilling effect" of ordinary and otherwise constitutionally defensible substantive rules of defamation liability. The anti-SLAPP statutes so helpfully analyzed by Johnson and Duran are legislative interventions created to accomplish precisely the same result.7 Anti-SLAPP statutes anticipate and nullify the chilling effects produced by First Amendment litigation. …
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理解第一修正案
能被《华盛顿法律评论》这样有思想、有见地的评论员阅读和参与是一种难得的荣幸。参与到这种范围和强度的对话中是令人振奋的。我非常感谢《华盛顿法律评论》、Ronald K.L. Collins和David Skover以及华盛顿大学法学院使这次研讨会成为可能。当我读到这次研讨会的投稿时,我想起了奥利弗·温德尔·霍姆斯(Oliver Wendell Holmes)的著名训令:“我们必须思考事物而不是语言,或者至少我们必须不断地将我们的语言转化为它们所代表的事实,如果我们要坚持真实和真实的话。”虽然律师喜欢文字和语言,但霍姆斯认为,“法治的真正理由在于,它有助于实现我们所希望的社会目标。”福尔摩斯的建议是要密切关注我们的法律词汇是否实际上服务于我们的社会目的。在第一修正案的判例中,词语和词尾之间的脱节最为明显。我们受到第一修正案肥大症的困扰。教义无休止地、毫无意义地扩散。在每个角落都有另一个令人困惑的第一修正案“测试”。我们几乎从来没有停下来问过,这些不一致的抽象教条实际上是为了什么社会目的服务的。我们很少花时间“把我们的(第一修正案)文字翻译成它们所代表的事实”。幸运的是,布鲁斯·e·h·约翰逊和萨拉·k·杜兰的富有启发性的贡献似乎几乎没有受到这种困扰。反对公众参与的战略诉讼(SLAPPs)在理论上是有趣的,因为它们说明了法律用语与社会目的之间的脱节。原告提起SLAPP诉讼是为了执行实体法原则所赋予的权利。实体法理论,特别是在确定特定言论行为是否应获得第一修正案豁免的宪法标准的情况下,应该准确地反映我们的价值观。因此,乍一看,SLAPP诉讼应该没有问题;只要宪法标准规定被告的言论应受到宪法保护,被告就应占上风。然而,这种思维方式没有对法律标准的实际作用给予足够的重视。它未能认识到与执行实体原则的诉讼相关的交易成本。即使是为不值得的诉讼辩护也可能是昂贵和耗时的,而且这种费用可能会阻碍原本受保护的公众讨论的参与。Johnson和Duran讨论的反slapp法规旨在解决和消除此类交易成本。它们不仅降低了律师费,而且还为SLAPP诉讼的“迅速和廉价”解决创造了途径约翰逊和杜兰邀请我们理论化执行第一修正案实质性标准的实际行为影响;它们将我们的注意力引向教义背后的现实。第一修正案的实质性规则应该考虑第一修正案权利诉讼的交易成本,这是一种深刻的见解。它最终源于福尔摩斯启发的法律现实主义。约翰逊和杜兰关注的是执行第一修正案原则的成本如何影响公众话语的实际参与。美国最高法院系统地以这种方式进行推理的第一个判决是《纽约时报公司诉沙利文案》(New York Times Co. v. Sullivan),该案确立了“实际恶意”规则,正是为了使诽谤诉讼的交易成本无效它设计了实际恶意规则,以预测和消除诽谤责任的普通和其他宪法上可辩护的实质性规则的“寒蝉效应”。约翰逊和杜兰分析的反slapp法规是为了达到完全相同的结果而制定的立法干预措施反slapp法规预见并消除了第一修正案诉讼所产生的寒蝉效应。…
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期刊介绍: Washington Law Review is a student-run and student-edited scholarly legal journal at the University of Washington School of Law. Inaugurated in 1919, it is the first legal journal published in the Pacific Northwest. Today, the Law Review publishes Articles and Comments of national and regional interest four times per year.
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