U&PU is a blawg,
which lawyer/blogger Denise Howell (Bag and Baggage) defined as
"a web log written by lawyers and/or concerned primarily with legal affairs."

Topics shall also include
- linguistics (often as it relates to law)
- politics and current events
- philosophy and jurisprudence, and naturally
Stuff Worth Reading, which includes books, articles, posts, caselaw, and more.

Read, share, and enjoy. Some rights reserved.

Unused and Probably Unusable

-- a linguistically inclined blawg

Friday, September 30, 2005

Scalia MP1 followup: Branding and Casey
[First of all, I wish to make classic blogger error #4, and apologize for the long hiatus between posting. Such apologies draw attention to the error, fail to remedy it, and ring hollow. If I wanted to post daily, I could. It is not possible to post thoughtfully while I'm at trial, and I shouldn't try; but in the meantime, I can get back to regular posting. Here goes.]

Anonymous #4, frequent reader and commenter, wrote in the comments to my first installment of the Scalia MegaPost, on the Living Constitution:

Whose preferences shall be enshrined in the law?
An excellent question, A#4, and I intend to address it.

I recommend everyone to go read his whole comment - wait, why send you, when I can just paste it all here, with hidden HTML so you don't have to see the rest unless you want?
Assuming that a branding case came up to the Supreme Court, should they

1. Hold hearings-
2. Sponsor a study-
3. Put the issue to a referendum-
4. Consult the law of other countries-

Or

5. Consult their own consciences and considered reaction-(rest of comment hidden behind the jump)
(end of comment)

Well, wasn't that special? Let's dialogue with A#4; thanks for the comment. Interesting point. I don't agree, as I indicated in my own comment. But it's Scalia I'm really disagreeing with, at least as much as you.

On Branding
Why Branding doesn't require an impermissible value judgment.

Assuming that a branding case came before the Supreme Court, based on a claim of a constitutional violation under the First, Fifth, and Eighth Amendments and possibly "something else," what should a court do?

Hold a hearing, sponsor studies? Why no, you ninny, as my Crim Law prof was wont to say. The court should look at the text and purpose of the clauses at issue to see if they support a claim. In this case, the Eighth Amendment says, and I quote,
Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.
Now, I don't know about you, but i read that as having content. Meaning, I call it. "Excessive" means a judgment call is called for. So do "cruel" and "unusual" - and I'd even misread it on purpose, as "cruel or unusual." Is it a conjunctive and, or does it mean "or"? Do you know? Does anyone? Probably. But let's just read it without the benefit of that knowledge.

The 8th is supposed to allow Congress to be guided by the intentions of the Founders, right? Well, no, I'd argue that it was _intended_ to do nothing whatsoever. Much like the 1st, 2nd, 3rd etc. Amendments, there were several schools of thought:

  1. The Amendment has no meaning and no significance; if someone else wants it, we can stick it in and it won't tie our hands


  2. The Amendment has no meaning, and is important only because it reflects the protections that the Constitution provides in any case - the only danger being that some foolish future generation might not think it obvious that the Constitution itself protects these things, and that therefore "what is not included, was to be excluded." The government being one of limited powers, granted "by the people," it naturally cannot expand its own power. [too bad that one didn't catch on]


  3. The Amendment is crucially important, because those silly Federalists (meaning Federalists, not meaning Anti-Federalists such as some members of FedSoc) want to strip away our rights to have armed militias, to avoid an oppressive establishment Church, to keep soldiers out of our homes, to protect our historical rights to a jury of our peers.

I have sympathy for some of the above. But I don't think the intent matters. What was key to one voter or one state was not to another; the words must govern, as interpreted today.

Justice Scalia's comments that you quoted - that if Roe was not rightly decided at the time, and if it has not produced a settled body of law, then it should be overruled - is a nice argument. I think it's not even adequate, on its own, but that's another argument: the Roe argument.

We're still having the Branding argument.

But feel free to bring up Roe more in comments; maybe I'll complete and publish the Roe post I've been contemplating.

Monday, September 26, 2005

Update: Trial, a guest post, trial again
If at first you don't succeed, try, try again. If you are a skydiver, however, we recommend you get it right on the first attempt, and every time thereafter.

The paucity in blog posts lately can be attributed to two main factors: a major trial out of town, and another upcoming major trial. Each case involves more than a week of testimony; more than 5 years of work (not necessarily mine, but that of associates and co-counsel) (not "man-hours" or "person hours," but actual calendar years of work); appeals preceding the actual trials over summary judgment motions, which had to be resolved first; and, therefore, substantial preparation as well as effort to actually try the case.

Neither trial (the one just completed or the other one pending) has or had much prospect of settlement before a verdict. Most cases don't make it to trial. Many trials don't make it to verdict. These particular cases involve such stupendous amounts of effort and such disparate views by defendants and plaintiffs about the value of the case and the likely outcome that it will take a trial in order to resolve.

In this way, a major trial is much like a war. No rational actor would get involved if they could achieve what they wanted some easier way. No rational parties would engage in it if they were going to lose. Obviously, either some parties are irrational or there are some informational assymetries, or systematic biases involved. While I'd love to believe that can be fixed, I'm going to go out on a limb and say that neither lawsuits nor wars are going to be permanently ended anytime soon. Which is good in a way, as I'd be out of a job.

In between trials, I produced another guest post at Evan's blog, this one on language discrimination. As George noted in the comments, he'd already been there and done that. I quite like his post, and if I'd had time, would have used Google Blog Search to ferret out other blog posts on linguistic discrimination, such as Students' Rights to their Own Language, cultural and linguistic minorities, and of course an obligatory link to a post about "Ebonics" and what it should actually be called - and what it is. Alas, I was timeless. Time-free? No, I had no time that was free. You get the drift.

Upcoming posts I have in mind: more on Scalia (natch), more on linguistics, and some more on the nature of blogdom and on the nature of law. That is, expect jurisprudence, if not other sorts of prudence.

Related Posts (on one page):

  1. Back at trial again; new fave blogs
  2. Update: Trial, a guest post, trial again

Monday, September 5, 2005

My final Roberts pre-confirmation vote posting
The last word... for now
[update: bumped up, b/c of the post immediately below this one]

Since we are about to enter the eye of the storm - the period at the center of all the howling winds and disruptive outbursts - during which Roberts will be, if possible, at even higher levels of scrutiny than heretofore, this will be my last post on Roberts before his confirmation vote.

For those who prefer to skip lightly over legal and political tea-reading and read instead the far more interesting linguistically-inclined posts, I provide this convenient break:

And that's it for now. Until John Roberts has received an up or down vote from the Senate, expect to see no more Roberts posts here.

Sunday, September 4, 2005

Rehnquist has died; further posts on hold
William Hubbs Rehnquist, b. 10/1/1924 d. 9/3/2005. His passing leaves a second vacancy on the Supreme Court, guarantees that the Court will not begin its new term in October with a full complement, and adds new importance to the nomination process already underway to replace O'Connor, who has indicated she will retire effective upon the confirmation of her successor.

I won't go into the Chief Justice's life and work; every single other media outlet and Blawg on the web seems to be ahead of me. I learned the news from the NY Times; Howard Bashman collected many good links; Eugene Volokh urged us all not to be too partisan too soon after the man's passing; many others chimed in with the news and with their thoughts.

I will note only that WHR served as an Associate Justice for well over 14 years, and as Chief Justice for very nearly 19. I am one of the millions of Americans for whom Rehnquist has always been on the high court during their lifetime, and who cannot remember a time when he was not Chief.

I will be travelng for trial for the next few weeks; expect occasional follow-ons to existing posts and comments, but not the next few editions of the now in-production Scalia Mega-Post. Still in the planning stages is a post on the care and feeding of trolls.

Watch also for a possible guest-post on Evan's blawg in the coming week, on a topic related to several of this blawg's chief interests: law, politics, and language.

As always, if you are looking for a particular specialty product, try asking for it. I might just comply with your requested post on, say, how linguistics can inform the study of contracts.

[update and afterthought: To correct a few misapprehensions.

  1. There is no such post as "Acting Chief Justice." The senior Associate Justice will lead the Court.


  2. Scalia and Thomas will not be nominated, now or in the future, to be Chief Justice


  3. Edith Jones is just as unlikely to be nominated to the Chief Justice slot as she was to be nominated to O'Connor's slot. That is, highly, highly unlikely


  4. O'Connor's point about her nominated successor not being a woman (yes, obvious) and how that meant she thought Bush had not made the perfect choice is now particularly apt. Bush will likely nominate a man, quite possibly a white man, to be Chief Justice


  5. My prediction would be that the second nominee will not be made public until the current process is complete