失去正当程序原则

IF 0.2 4区 社会学 Q4 LAW Catholic University Law Review Pub Date : 2015-08-24 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2649958
Larkin, J. Paul
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引用次数: 1

摘要

为了使正当程序条款的理论发展易于管理,最高法院在过去五十年中一直试图使其裁决符合两种不同的类别之一:政府在剥夺某人的生命、自由或财产之前必须满足的程序要求,以及对政府可以实现的剥夺的具体内容的实质性限制。不幸的是,法律和生活都不能如此轻易地分类。法院判决了许多案件,这些案件违背了它最近将高卢分成两部分,而不是三部分(或更多)的企图。若干正当程序原则似乎与法院所发展的法律主体相分离。有些法律可能会因为落入那些通常被描述为不再是“好法律”的判例集而面临被淘汰的风险。但并不是所有的宗教都将遭受这种命运,它们之所以会并应该保持活力的原因与其他教义的基本原理有关,并有助于解释为什么它们不应该随波随流。本文第一部分将描述程序性要求和实质性限制之间的双重区别,这两种区别主导了对正当程序条款的讨论。第二部分将考虑法院尚未试图将其归入其中一类的正当程序判例法的几个类别。第三部分将讨论《大宪章》(Magna Carta)的起源,这是一份13世纪的自由宪章,后来催生了我国宪法中的正当程序条款(Due Process Clauses)。第四部分将以考虑宪法中是否有法院失去正当程序的决定作为结束。特别地,第四部分将探讨《大宪章》是否提供了这个家园,是否可以作为宪法不断发展的基础。
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The Lost Due Process Doctrines
In order to render manageable the doctrinal development of the Due Process Clause, the Supreme Court over the last fifty years has attempted to fit its decisions into one of two distinct categories: procedural requirements that the government must satisfy before depriving someone of life, liberty, or property, and substantive limitations on exactly what deprivations the government may accomplish. Unfortunately, neither the law nor life can be so easily classified. The Court has decided numerous cases that defy its recent attempts to divide Gaul into two parts, not three (or more). Several due process doctrines seem to have been isolated from the main body of law that the Court has developed. Some could be at risk of being eliminated by falling into that collection of precedents often described as no longer being "good law." But not all of them will suffer that fate, and the reasons why they will and should remain vibrant are relevant to the rationale for the other doctrines and help explain why they should not be set adrift.Part I of this article will describe the two-fold divide between procedural requirements and substantive limitations that has dominated the discussion of the Due Process Clause. Part II will consider a few categories of due process case law that the Court has not attempted to fit into one or the other of those categories. Part III will discuss the provenance of the Magna Carta, a thirteenth century charter of liberties that later gave birth to the Due Process Clauses in our Constitution. Part IV will wrap up by considering whether there is a home in the Constitution for the Court’s Lost Due Process Decisions. In particular, Part IV will ask whether Magna Carta provides that home and can serve as a base for the ongoing development of constitutional law.
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