Thursday, April 25, 2024

Pretty Much What Justice Jackson Said

The legal doctrine of appeals is that the court, especially the High Court, limit itself to the facts and parties before it rather than act as a “super-legislature.” “Change the facts, change the outcome” is not similarly a legal doctrine, but it is how case law and legal reasoning work. The general principle of the tort of assault, say, rests on the recognized elements of the tort, and the facts presented by the case. There is no one rule for all cases of alleged civil assault. One if the things you learn in Torts is that the concept of “offensive contact” is a fact-specific one. The Court does not have to establish, in Justice Jackson’s phrase, a “bucket of official acts” v. private ones, based solely on this case. Rule on the facts before the Court, and leave the future, to the future.

That, I fear, this Court will not do; and working out the parameters of presidential immunity in this one case could therefore take…years.
Which is how the lower courts understood it: on these facts, is former President Trump entitled to immunity? The majority of the Supremes went haring after the defense of the Imperial Presidency. Which was not the issue presented, by the facts or the parties. Oh, Trump argued it that way. But the Court could have fairly and reasonably swatted that aside. Really the factual and legal issue, isn’t it? Does the President have immunity to any extralegal attempt (or illegal one) to retain office? To be fair, that issue was actually recognized in arguments. And the justices didn’t seem overly impressed with Trump’s argument. But three hours? Really? It’s not (it shouldn’t be) that nuanced an issue. Especially on these facts as presented by these parties. A point the DOJ made very well; again, on the facts of the 2020 election, the 60+ failed lawsuits, etc. The legal issue presented by the facts. And how in the world can those facts POSSIBLY raise the issue of whether such actions are within the powers of the POTUS? Because if they do, then every election going forward will prompt a constitutional crisis as the losing incumbent goes to court to establish his authority to use whatever extra-legal authority is available to remain in office. And as C in C, that arguably includes using the military. And we’ll only know if it’s a coup four years later, when the Supreme Court finally gets around to it. Of course, by then… In my hypothetical, we’d need several years in Court to work that out. Which always falls to the”Rich White Man Privilege” rule. Is it a coincidence that most of the strongest critics of this case on the High Court are women of color?

I think not. 🧐 

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