Reconsidering Substantive Canons

IF 1.9 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW University of Chicago Law Review Pub Date : 2016-01-28 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2724054
Anita S. Krishnakumar
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper provides the first empirical study of the Roberts Court’s use of substantive canons in its statutory interpretation cases. Based on data from 295 statutory interpretation cases decided by the Roberts Court during its first six-and-a-half terms, the paper argues that much of the conventional wisdom about substantive canons of statutory construction is wrong, or at least overstated with respect to the modern Supreme Court. Substantive canons — such as the rule of lenity, the avoidance canon, or the presumption against extraterritorial application of domestic laws — have long been criticized as undemocratic judge-made rules that defeat congressional intent, afford willful judges a convenient vehicle for massaging different meanings out of the same text, and make statutory interpretation unpredictable, because judges invent new canons and reject old ones to suit their changing tastes. Scholars have bemoaned the amount of work that substantive canons perform in statutory interpretation cases and several have charged that textualist judges, in particular, overuse such canons.Whereas most previous studies have focused on the Rehnquist Court, this paper reconsiders the substantive canons in light of new data collected from the Roberts Court. The data show that contrary to the conventional wisdom, substantive canons are infrequently invoked on the modern Court — and that, even when invoked, they rarely play an outcome-determinative role in the Court’s statutory constructions. Indeed substantive canons often are referenced as an afterthought, or add-on argument supplying minimal additional support to an interpretation reached primarily through other interpretive tools. Perhaps most surprisingly, textualist Justices rarely invoke substantive canons in the opinions they author; indeed, intentionalist Justice Stevens leads the Roberts Court in references to such canons.The paper also challenges scholars’ gloomy warnings that Justices in the modern, New-Textualism-influenced era have replaced legislative history with substantive canons as the go-to resource for deciphering ambiguous statutory text. Rather, the data from the Roberts Court show that most of the Justices referenced legislative history at slightly, or even substantially, higher rates than they referenced substantive canons. Moreover, the Court’s own precedents, followed by practical-consequences-based reasoning — rather than substantive canons or legislative history — seem to be the unsung gap-filling mechanisms that the Justices turn to when confronted with unclear statutory text. The paper first reports the findings from my study of 295 Roberts Court cases and then explores the theoretical implications of these findings for several leading statutory interpretation theories and debates.
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重新考虑实质性准则
本文首次对罗伯茨法院在其法定解释案件中使用实体经典进行了实证研究。基于罗伯茨法院在其前六个半任期内判决的295个法定解释案件的数据,本文认为,关于法定解释的实质性规范的许多传统智慧是错误的,或者至少是对现代最高法院的夸大。实质性的准则——如宽大原则、回避准则或反对国内法域外适用的推定——长期以来一直被批评为不民主的法官制定的规则,这些规则违背了国会的意图,为任性的法官提供了一个方便的工具,可以从同一文本中提取不同的含义,并使法律解释变得不可预测,因为法官发明新的准则,拒绝旧的准则,以适应他们不断变化的口味。学者们对实体准则在法律解释案件中所做的大量工作表示遗憾,有些人指责文本主义法官,特别是过度使用这些准则。鉴于大多数先前的研究都集中在伦奎斯特法院,本文根据从罗伯茨法院收集的新数据重新考虑了实质性规范。数据表明,与传统的看法相反,现代法院很少援引实质性准则,即使援引,它们也很少在法院的法定结构中起决定结果的作用。事实上,实质性的经典通常被引用为事后的想法,或附加的论据,为主要通过其他解释工具达成的解释提供最小的额外支持。也许最令人惊讶的是,文本主义大法官很少在他们撰写的意见书中援引实质性规范;的确,意旨主义者史蒂文斯大法官是罗伯茨最高法院中引用这些准则的领头人。这篇论文还挑战了学者们的悲观警告,即受新文本主义影响的现代时代的法官们已经用实质性的教规取代了立法史,成为解读模棱两可的法定文本的必要资源。相反,罗伯茨法院的数据显示,大多数法官引用立法历史的比例略高于引用实质性法律的比例,甚至远远高于他们引用实质性法律的比例。此外,最高法院自己的先例,以及基于实际后果的推理,而不是实质性的规范或立法历史,似乎是法官们在面对不明确的法定文本时求助的一种不为人知的填补空白的机制。本文首先报告了我对295个罗伯茨法院案件的研究结果,然后探讨了这些发现对几个主要的法律解释理论和辩论的理论含义。
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CiteScore
2.40
自引率
5.00%
发文量
2
期刊介绍: The University of Chicago Law Review is a quarterly journal of legal scholarship. Often cited in Supreme Court and other court opinions, as well as in other scholarly works, it is among the most influential journals in the field. Students have full responsibility for editing and publishing the Law Review; they also contribute original scholarship of their own. The Law Review"s editorial board selects all pieces for publication and, with the assistance of staff members, performs substantive and technical edits on each of these pieces prior to publication.
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