国家司法选择的真正宪法问题:正当程序、司法保留与大众宪政的危险

Martin H. Redish, Jennifer Aronoff
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引用次数: 5

摘要

2009年,在Caperton诉A.T. Massey Coal Co.一案中,最高法院首次裁定,与司法竞选活动有关的行为侵犯了诉讼当事人的正当程序权利,因为对方当事人向负责此案的一名法官的竞选活动提供了过多的资金。Caperton案中承认的正当程序危险在于对事后感激的恐惧- -即害怕法官会因为对诉讼当事人的慷慨支持表示感谢而对其供词人的案件作出不同的裁决。法院对追溯性感激的关注既过于包容又不够包容。它过于包容,因为它证明了太多:所有的法官——甚至是受宪法第三条保护的联邦法官——都是由某人选出的,无论是总统还是参议员,而这从未被视为威胁到他们的独立性。然而,源于该裁决的正当程序规则也不够包容,因为它没有提及州法院选举的真正正当程序危险。本文认为,选择州法院法官的关键宪法问题在很大程度上不是最初的选择过程,而是使用多数主义程序(保留选举或州长任命)来确定司法保留。正是在这种背景下,所有关于司法独立的宪法关切汇聚在一起,因为正是在这种背景下,对判决独立的真正威胁才出现。法官担心以特定方式裁决某一特定案件可能会威胁到她的继续就业,这很容易使裁决偏离基于法官对事实和法律的独立评估而作出的中立裁决。该条认为,正当程序条款要求终身任期或至少某种形式的正式任期限制,以确保宪法要求的司法独立。尽管这一建议可能是激进的,但我们认为,没有其他方法可以确保公平的表象或现实,而公平是正当程序保障的核心。
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The Real Constitutional Problem with State Judicial Selection: Due Process Judicial Retention and the Dangers of Popular Constitutionalism
In Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., decided in 2009, the Supreme Court held for the first time that conduct related to a judicial election campaign violated a litigant’s right to procedural due process because the opposing litigant had contributed an inordinate amount of money to the campaign of one of the justices ruling on the case. The due process danger recognized in Caperton rests on a fear of retrospective gratitude — i.e., the fear that the Justice would decide his contributor’s case differently because he was grateful for the litigant’s generous support. The Court’s focus on retrospective gratitude is simultaneously overinclusive and underinclusive. It is overinclusive because it proves far too much: All judges — even federal judges protected by Article III — owe their selection to someone, whether it is a president or a senator, and that has never been deemed to threaten their independence. Yet the due process rule that derives from the decision is also underinclusive, because it makes no reference to the real due process danger of state court elections. This Article argues that the key constitutional problem with the selection of state court judges is for the most part not the initial selection process, but rather the use of majoritarian processes (either retention elections or gubernatorial appointment) to determine judicial retention. It is in this context that all of the constitutional concerns about judicial independence converge, because it is in this context that the very real threat to decisional independence arises. Judicial fears that deciding a particular case in a particular manner could threaten her continued employment could easily skew the decision from a neutral decision grounded in the judge’s independent assessment of the facts and law. The Article argues that life tenure or at the very least some form of formal term limit is required by the Due Process Clause to assure constitutionally required judicial independence. As radical as this recommendation may be, we argue that there is no other way to assure the appearance or reality of fairness which lie at the core of the due process guarantee.
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