Sovereign Impunity: The Supreme Court of Georgia's False Textualism Expands the Doctrine of Sovereign Immunity in the State

Laura Dove
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Abstract

Until recently, sovereign immunity — the doctrine that protects state entities from suit without the State’s consent — had been held by the Supreme Court of Georgia not to apply to suits seeking solely injunctive relief to prevent the State, its departments, or agencies from acting illegally or outside the scope of their authority. This rule stemmed partly from the fact that a significant policy basis for sovereign immunity is the protection of taxpayer funds, but also was grounded on the principle that the State may not “cloak itself in the mantle of sovereign immunity” to prevent its citizens from holding the State accountable to its own laws. In a recent case, however, the Supreme Court of Georgia nullified this longstanding principle by overruling a previous decision recognizing and affirming it. The Court’s decision to overrule the earlier case was based on a purportedly textualist analysis of a 1991 amendment to Georgia’s Constitution reserving sovereign immunity to the State, its departments, and agencies, and granting the exclusive power to waive sovereign immunity to Georgia’s General Assembly. Textualism, an approach to statutory and constitutional interpretation, requires courts to interpret texts based on the ordinary meaning of the terms employed within their context. Georgia courts’ interpretation jurisprudence typically reflects textualist principles. Although the Court examined the language in several portions of the Constitution’s sovereign immunity provision, it neglected the meaning of the provision’s most significant phrase: “sovereign immunity” itself. The Court failed to consider the constitutional language within its appropriate historical context, namely by refusing to examine the historical meaning of sovereign immunity as developed through decisions of the Georgia courts. This Article concludes that the Court’s decision is unsupported by the textualist principles of constitutional interpretation that it espouses and by the Court’s own precedent on the interpretation of constitutional text.
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主权有罪不罚:格鲁吉亚最高法院的错误文本主义扩大了国家主权豁免原则
直到最近,格鲁吉亚最高法院还认为,主权豁免——即保护国家实体在未经国家同意的情况下免受诉讼的原则——不适用于仅仅寻求禁令救济以防止国家、其部门或机构采取非法行动或超出其权力范围的诉讼。这一规则的部分原因是,主权豁免的一个重要政策基础是保护纳税人的资金,但也基于这样一个原则,即国家不得"披上主权豁免的外衣",以阻止其公民要求国家对本国法律负责。然而,在最近的一个案件中,乔治亚州最高法院推翻了先前承认并肯定这一原则的决定,从而使这一长期存在的原则无效。法院驳回先前案件的决定,据称是基于对1991年格鲁吉亚宪法修正案的文本主义分析,该修正案保留了对国家、其部门和机构的主权豁免,并授予格鲁吉亚大会放弃主权豁免的排他性权力。文本主义是对法律和宪法解释的一种方法,它要求法院根据在其上下文中使用的术语的一般含义来解释文本。乔治亚州法院的解释法理学典型地反映了文本主义原则。虽然法院审查了《宪法》主权豁免条款若干部分的措辞,但它忽略了该条款最重要的短语“主权豁免”本身的含义。法院未能在适当的历史背景下审议宪法用语,即拒绝审查通过格鲁吉亚法院的判决形成的主权豁免的历史含义。该条的结论是,最高法院的裁决不支持它所支持的宪法解释的文本主义原则,也不支持最高法院自己在解释宪法文本方面的先例。
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