《联邦民事诉讼规则》第52(A)条作为意识形态武器?

B. Adamson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在本文中,作者探讨了《联邦民事诉讼规则》第52(a)条和审查选择标准,以确定上诉法官是否可以利用其条款来追求意识形态目标。发件人审查了第52(a)条的执行条款,即事实认定、明显错误和书面证据,并得出结论认为,这些条款具有很大的延展性,使上诉法官在决定是否适用明显错误、重新开始或其他审查标准方面有广泛的自由裁量权。文章接着指出了上诉法院援引的事实类型学(历史的、终极的、宪法的、立法的、社会学的、科学的、政治的、经济的、司法的),其中一些事实类型学也使上诉法院能够规避规则52(a),并对初审法院的事实发现进行从头审查。文章的结论是,审查选择的标准可以作为一个棱镜,通过它可以观察法官的意识形态倾向。尤其是当这些选择是在没有纪律、没有原则的情况下做出的。提交人认为,上诉法院对规则52(a)和事实类型学的处理可能损害判决的合法性、行政效率以及审判法院和上诉法院之间的和睦。由于规则52(a)的可延展性和事实类型学具有重要的法理功能,作者提出了一些建议,以澄清适用于审查标准的裁决规则,并减轻在判断适用的审查标准时产生的意识形态偏见。
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Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(A) as an Ideological Weapon?
In this article, the author explores Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a) and standard of review choice to determine whether appellate judges can exploit its terms to pursue ideological goals. The author examines the operative terms of Rule 52(a), viz., findings of fact, clear error, and documentary evidence, and concludes that they are so malleable as to give appellate judges wide discretion in deciding whether clear error, de novo, or some other standard of review is to be applied. The article then goes on to identify fact typologies appellate courts invoke (historical, ultimate, constitutional, legislative, sociological, scientific, political, economic, jurisdictional), some which also enables them to circumvent Rule 52(a) and engage in de novo review of a trial court's factual findings The article concludes that standard of review choices can serve as a prism through which to view a judge's ideological predisposition, especially when those choices are made in an undisciplined, unprincipled manner. The author argues that appellate courts' treatment of Rule 52(a) and fact typology can impair decisional legitimacy, administrative efficiency, and comity between the trial and appellate courts. As Rule 52(a)'s malleable character and fact typology serve important jurisprudential functions, the author makes several recommendations to clarify decisional rules as they apply to standard of review, and to mitigate unwarranted perception of ideological bias in making judgments about the applicable standard of review.
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