Supremely Modest Proposal
or, Building a Bridge to the 18th Century
Time for America's favorite parlor game: let's change something! kill time talking about something that'll never change!
Why does a 21st century nation have an 18th century legal system? Don't get me wrong, I'm not arguing for a shift in constitutional powers or against the Enlightenment and English roots of the glorious American legal tradition. I'm just wondering why the system still functions the same way it did in the days of horse and carriage? Why do we tolerate regionalization of federal law (particularly on fundamental issues of constitutional interpretation) when the whole point of federal law is that it's supposed to be the same all over the country? Why is our court system still stuck in the adversarial, challenge-response-precedent model, which leaves so much bad law untouched, and so many uncertainties in place?
The main limiting factors in the 18th century, from a legal standpoint, were speed and manpower. Circuits really were territories covered by judges whose responsibilities required frequent travel. Decisions were promulgated in books which took time to assemble and to distribute, not to mention read and absorb. It would have been very difficult for decisions in one region to be known and applied consistently throughout the nation, at least immediately.
As the American legal system matured, the distribution of information became more consistent, but the basic structure has remained. But, as you well know, information collection and transmission is considerably better organized now, as is the judiciary -- databases, the internet, the growth of government into a bureaucratic machine, all mean that the administrative division of the country into regions does not have to equate legal detachment. Moreover, the communications technology can aid not just horizontal integration, but vertical as well.
First, I propose that rulings of appeals courts, when they apply to federal law and regulation, criminal procedure, etc., should be nationally effective unless contradicted by a ruling in another circuit. This is only a slight change, I realize, but it's actually quite significant. There will be a slightly greater burden of urgency that a plaintiff would have to meet to have a case heard at the appeals level. Conversely, there would be less uncertainty about procedure and interpretation resulting from issues which have only been heard in one or two circuits. It would also raise the profile of the appeals courts, drawing them more directly into the (tense) discourse between the branches. A Supreme Court decision to not hear an appeal of an Appeals Circuit ruling would effectively endorse a ruling, not simply fail to overturn it as it currently does. There is little excuse, in a national court system with 21st century technology, to maintain the legal fiction that one circuit is ignorant of other circuits' rulings. The technology allows for a more open discourse, and that's usually a good thing.
Lest you think, though, that I'm simply shifting power downward, consider this: In addition to horizontal integration, the system should have a much freer vertical flow of information. Lower courts should be able to request clarification from higher courts on matters of interpretation and application. This would not take the right of appeal away from those who receive unfavorable rulings, but it would cut down on the frequency with which different interpretations of higher court ambiguities results in divergent decisions. Lower courts would not be passing up facts at trial, but would be sending on requests for greater specificity in definition of existing rulings. Responses would have to be approved by a majority of the court (I thought about requiring approval from all the members of the majority in the original ruling, but this would preclude clarifications of cases after a justice retires, particularly a swing vote like O'Connor; perhaps majority of remaining members of majority, in addition to absolute majority?), and would appear as a footnote in the original ruling, binding on all lower courts.
The principle of stare decisis, respect for precedent, means that old decisions remain in force as well, unless directly contradicted as a result of a later challenge to the same law or in the same circumstance. There are decisions, though, that go unchallenged so long that they are out of date, positions that represent a moment in time which both society and the law come to regret. I would suggest that a court be allowed, by unanimous vote, to repudiate a previous ruling even in the absence of a specific challenge. Obviously, for lower courts this right would be limited: any case which had been appealed higher would be out of bounds, and the repudiation would have to be based on principles of law rather than on the facts of a case; District courts would be extremely limited in their ability to apply this. Even for higher courts, the right is limited to repudiation: rulings could not be rewritten or revised (beyond the footnote clarifications described above), but would have to be entirely reversed. The reversal would have the same effect as a normal ruling in contradiction to stare decisis: some cases would have to be revisited, some lower rulings reversed (if anyone remains to appeal them) and it's likely that there would be new interrogatories or cases to fill in the ambiguity created by such an act.
But that's normal: the law is an evolving, active system. These changes would allow the judicial record to become more dynamic, reflecting the ability to access it remotely in real-time, and would shift responsibilities within the system without fundamentally shifting power. Legislatures could still pass laws which corrected judicial misinterpretations of legislative intent, could still interpret the Constitution in their own fashions unless or until contradicted by higher courts, could still leave old, bad laws on the books for centuries if they wanted. Executives would still have all the usual lattitudes of appointment and regulation and enforcement, though they might lose a bit of discretionary wiggle room in the process. Both of those branches have taken advantage of the technology to become more efficient, more responsive (to supporters, if not to all constituents): the judiciary needs to move forward as well.
Note on comments: I will be ignoring any comment which dismisses these ideas because of the difficulty of change or unreasoned fear of change, which dismisses (or endorses) one part without considering them as a whole, or which engages in personalities, partisanship or credentialism. You're welcome to post them, and to discuss them; I'm just going to ignore them, myself, that's all.
Followup: Jason Kuznicki thinks I'm off the rails in a few directions. I asked a question in response that I'd like to pose to anyone else who's listening:"if you want to play, what do you think is the greatest flaw in the federal judiciary, and how could it be rectified?"