Posted on 08/23/2006 1:52:12 PM PDT by Congressman Billybob
Last week US District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor, in Detroit, Michigan, ruled that the National Security Agencys overseas communications intercept program was unconstitutional. This is tied for the worst decision Ive ever read, in 36 years as a member of the bar, both federal and state.
Dozens of pundits have already written about aspects of her decision that are egregiously wrong. Even the august New York Times, which opposes the NSA program and favors Judge Taylors result, still has called her opinion badly reasoned.
Its important that lawyers, legal writers, and experienced laymen be able to recognize a thoroughly incompetent judicial decision when one is handed down from any court. The worst of the worst, to my experience, share a single, fundamental flaw.
In the Federalist, No. 78, Alexander Hamilton wrote for himself and James Madison and John Jay about the limits of federal judicial authority. It may truly be said to have neither FORCE nor WILL, but merely judgment..... [Emphasis in the original.] The Constitution gave federal judges lifetime tenure and guaranteed salaries to prevent the sort of command influence exercised by the King of England, forcing judges to decide cases as he wanted. Yet Hamiltons statement means that judges should use their independence to decide the particular case before them, not to impose their personal will on the case and the parties.
Any judge who imposes his/her personal opinions in the outcome of any case, acts outside his/her constitutional authority, and in violation of his/her oath of office. Is that conclusion too harsh? Lets review.
Others have ably taken apart Judge Taylors opinion in the NSA case. So, I add a second example, the decision it tied as worst of all time. In 1992, Judge Stanley Sporkin of the US District Court in D.C. decided the case of John Boehner (and more than 150 other members of Congress) challenging the latest congressional pay raise as unconstitutional under the newly ratified 27th Amendment. That was written by Congressman James Madison as part of the Bill of Rights, but not finally ratified until 203 years later.
In refusing to apply this part of the Bill of Rights to Congress latest cost-of-living raise, Judge Sporkin made the same three basic errors as Judge Taylor in the NSA case. First, he ignored the law an amendment drafted by James Madison and now finally ratified. Second, he ignored the facts, ruling that a COLA increase in pay is not really a raise.
But the most basic error by Judge Sporkin was to impose his personal whims on the case. And he left clues to his bias in the opinion itself, as did Judge Taylor. Judge Sporkin actually used as evidence his personal observations from decades before, when he saw a Congressman take a bribe. Even laymen reading this know that no judge has a right to invent evidence out of thin air, without testimony or cross-examination.
Judge Sporkins decision was so bad that the Court of Appeals made no attempt to correct his errors. Instead, it simply ignored his decision, and wrote a brand-new one to replace it. In deference to his seniority, it didnt say it was throwing his decision away, but just did it.
Normally, when a case has been butchered on the facts, it will be remanded to the trial court for review and a correct decision. The Court of Appeals did not return this case to Judge Sporkin, probably recognizing he would butcher the case, again.
I expect Judge Taylors decision to meet the same fate. It is so bad, in so many ways, that I do not expect the Court of Appeals even to attempt to correct its errors. Instead, I expect them to throw her decision out, though again they may not announce that, in deference to her seniority.
There is one final wrinkle in the Taylor decision. The blogosphere has found out that she kept the case and ruled on it, even though she was Trustee and Secretary on a charity board which had donated $45,000 over the last two years to the ACLU of Michigan. And that was one of the plaintiffs in the case before her.
This is such a grave and obvious breach of judicial ethics that Judge Taylor should be disciplined, in addition to being stripped off this or any other case involving the ACLU. That should happen, but probably will not.
Lawyers, and laymen who deal with legal subjects, should recognize the tell-tale signs of judicial incompetence in any case at any level. They are: Avoiding the facts, because they are inconvenient. Avoiding the law including US Supreme Court precedents, because they lead in the wrong direction. And injecting personal opinions into what should be a legal opinion or decision.
When all three of these errors occur in a single case, you can be sure its an example of a judge violating his/her oath of office, by imposing personal views on the outcome. Do not trust press accounts of decisions, since reporters frequently miss such errors, or share the judges bias and dont report them. To see such bias at work, you must read the original opinions.
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About the Author: John Armor is a lawyer specializing in constitutional law, who may again be a candidate for Congress in the 11th District of North Carolina.
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John / Billybob
This is such a grave and obvious breach of judicial ethics that Judge Taylor should be disciplined, in addition to being stripped off this or any other case involving the ACLU. That should happen, but probably will not.
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I've watched enough Perry Mason to know, that is not good.
Thanks for 'sporkin' off. :-)!
It seems that Judge Taylor, and such the like have only contempt for a government by, and for , and of the people!!!!
Awesome Review, CB!
For a non-legal mind like myself it was also a great education.
I don't think a lower court justice should be able to block a higher level branch of government from acting. That judge should simply be permitted to forward an opinion to the equal level branch of government....in this case, The Supreme Court.
Congress or the President should not be over-ruled by a lower court justice, any more than they should be over-ruled by a lower level bureaucrat out of one of their own agencies.
Excellent piece CB.
I don't know much about the law but it seems to me that this judge should quietly be asked to retire by her peers. She is not only incompetent but unethical and I would think federal judges should police their own.
Great piece! Thanks for your writing.
Ditto that!
Sporkin make a bad decision? You gotta be kidding !
(was he awake? he notoriously slept thru trials ... a regular trailblazer for J. Ginsberg)
Wait a minute...I thought laws were made by Congress...when were judges given that authority? I thought when judges tried to do this....those rulings could be ignored.
Judges should NOT MAKE LAW!
CASE CLOSED!!!
She was a Jimmy Carter appointee, no? What more need be said?
I woul be very interested to know if he made any good ones. Since Carter seems to have a true genius for coming down on the wrong side of any issue, no matter what it is, I really wonder whether he made any decent federal judicial appointments at all.
Bad law make a good article! BTTT.
Judges should NOT MAKE LAW!
CASE CLOSED!!!
Amen!
well written.
Here's her biography from the Detroit African-American History Project. She was first appointed to the bench by Coleman Young. She also is married to a congressman. Cronyism at it's worst, apparently.
If you can find one and demonstrate the wisdom of his/her decisions, don't hesitate to let me know. :)
"this judge should quietly be asked to retire by her peers. She is not only incompetent but unethical and I would think federal judges should police their own."
Quietly asked by her peers? How about vociferously impeached by her Citizen-Employers?
Judges police their own? Heard of Gramsci? The corrupt COVER for their own.
/rant OFF
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