Ordinary Causation: A Study in Experimental Statutory Interpretation

IF 1.5 3区 社会学 Q1 LAW Indiana Law Journal Pub Date : 2019-03-14 DOI:10.31234/osf.io/pdjb7
James Macleod
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引用次数: 15

Abstract

In a series of recent split decisions interpreting criminal and tort-like legislation, the Supreme Court has purported to give statutory causation requirements their ordinary, plain meaning. Armed with dictionaries, examples from everyday speech, and commonsense intuitions, the Court’s majority has explained that statutory phrases like “because of” and “results from” entail but-for causation as a matter of ordinary usage. There’s just one problem: The Court’s majority (and the many state and federal courts following its lead) is wrong on the facts—specifically, the facts about how people ordinarily interpret, understand, and use causal language. This Article considers a novel approach to ordinary meaning statutory interpretation, using these recent causation cases as a proof of concept: To find how people would ordinarily construe statutory language in context, ask a lot of people to apply the disputed language, and observe what they do. In short, to find public meaning, ask the public. As a demonstration, the Article reports the results of a nationally representative survey of nearly 1500 jury-eligible laypeople. It tests the Supreme Court’s recent pronouncements about the ordinary meaning of causal language in Title VII, the Hate Crimes Prevention Act, the Controlled Substances Act, and jury instructions in similar criminal and statutory tort settings. The results reveal clear and consistent patterns of causal attribution and ordinary usage—patterns that squarely contradict the Court’s ordinary meaning determinations. The results also demonstrate that certain alternative causation standards, though rejected by the Court as inconsistent with ordinary linguistic, conceptual, and moral intuitions, come closer to tracking all three. These discoveries raise serious concerns about the outcomes in recent criminal and tort causation cases, and possibly about ordinary and plain meaning interpretation more broadly. After discussing the implications for causation doctrine and statutory interpretation, the Article considers whether similar experimental methodologies might shed light on additional interpretation controversies in criminal and tort settings, on theories of common law doctrinal development, and on philosophical analyses of causation in criminal and tort theory.
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普通因果关系:实验性法律解释研究
在最近一系列解释刑事和侵权立法的分歧裁决中,最高法院声称赋予法定因果关系要求其普通的、明确的含义。凭借词典、日常用语中的例子和常识性直觉,最高法院的多数派解释说,像“因为”和“结果来自”这样的法定短语在日常用法中包含因果关系。只有一个问题:最高法院的多数意见(以及许多追随它的州和联邦法院)在事实上是错误的——特别是关于人们通常如何解释、理解和使用因果语言的事实。本文以这些最近的因果关系案例作为概念证明,考虑了一种普通意义法律解释的新方法:寻找人们通常如何在上下文中解释法定语言,请很多人应用有争议的语言,并观察他们是如何做的。简而言之,要找到公众的意义,就要问公众。作为示范,本文报告了一项对近1500名符合陪审团资格的非专业人士进行的具有全国代表性的调查结果。它测试了最高法院最近关于第七章、《仇恨犯罪预防法》、《管制物质法》中因果语言的一般含义的声明,以及类似刑事和法定侵权环境中的陪审团指示。结果揭示了因果归因和普通用法的清晰和一致的模式,这些模式完全与法院的普通含义决定相矛盾。结果还表明,某些替代的因果关系标准,虽然被法院驳回为与普通的语言、概念和道德直觉不一致,但更接近于跟踪这三者。这些发现引起了人们对最近的刑事和侵权因果关系案件的结果的严重关注,也可能引起人们对更广泛的普通和普通意义解释的严重关注。在讨论了因果关系理论和法定解释的含义之后,本文考虑了类似的实验方法是否可能对刑事和侵权行为背景下的其他解释争议、普通法理论发展理论以及刑事和侵权理论中因果关系的哲学分析有所启发。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.40
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期刊介绍: Founded in 1925, the Indiana Law Journal is a general-interest academic legal journal. The Indiana Law Journal is published quarterly by students of the Indiana University Maurer School of Law — Bloomington. The opportunity to become a member of the Journal is available to all students at the end of their first-year. Members are selected in one of two ways. First, students in the top of their class academically are automatically invited to become members. Second, a blind-graded writing competition is held to fill the remaining slots. This competition tests students" Bluebook skills and legal writing ability. Overall, approximately thirty-five offers are extended each year. Candidates who accept their offers make a two-year commitment to the Journal.
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