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Out of Order: Arrogance, Corruption and Incompetence on the Bench.


by Max Boot, New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: Basic Books, 252 pages, $25.00

Most analysis of the judicial function proceeds on a rather highfalutin high·fa·lu·tin or hi·fa·lu·tin   also high·fa·lu·ting
adj. Informal
Pompous or pretentious: "highfalutin reasons for denying direct federal assistance to the unemployed" 
 level, with subtle and imponderable im·pon·der·a·ble  
adj.
That cannot undergo precise evaluation: imponderable problems.



im·pon
 contentions about comparative institutional capacities floating back and forth. The contestants act in the belief that if we manage to understand these capacities, we'll be able to define a role for the courts, especially in their potentially dangerous task of reviewing legislation for constitutionality.

Max Boot's Out of Order does not engage much in this interminable debate. Instead Boot, editorial features editor at The Wall Street Journal, gets down and dirty, asking what real live judges actually do. The answer is grim: There are lots of fools and knaves out there, wielding the power of the state in stupid, destructive, abusive, and malicious ways. Boot tracks these jurisprudential monsters through virtually every branch of the law.

In doing so, he helps right the balance between lawyers and judges Alexis de Tocqueville, 1835

Alexis de Tocqueville, a French political scientist, historian, and politician, is best known for Democracy in America (1835). A believer in democracy, he was concerned about the concentration of power in the hands of a centralized government.
 in the court of public opinion. Public esteem for lawyers is dismally low, apparently reflecting a judgment that all the plagues of the court system should be laid at their door. But it is the judges who make the rules and run the system, and Boot rightly argues that much of the responsibility is theirs.

The anecdotes of incompetence and villainy Villainy
See also Evil, Wickedness.

Vindictiveness (See VENGEANCE.)

Violence (See BRUTALITY, CRUELTY.)

d’Acunha, Teresa

portrait of devilish Spanish servant and kidnapper. [Br. Lit.
 in Out of Order go on and on; indeed, that is the fun of the book. We have the judge who refuses to remove a vehemently prejudiced juror juror n. any person who actually serves on a jury. Lists of potential jurors are chosen from various sources such as registered voters, automobile registration or telephone directories. ; the one who forces a prison system to provide inmates with "hot pots" in their cells; the one who, supposedly to remedy racial discrimination, orders a state to invest millions in a magnet school that must include a 2,000-square-foot planetarium planetarium, optical device used to project a representation of the heavens onto a domed ceiling; the term also designates the building that houses such a device. A modern planetarium consists of as many as 150 motor-driven projectors mounted on an axis. ; the one who gives probation to a juvenile who participated in a bloody murder by supplying the gun and helping dispose of the body. This is quite a rogues' gallery.

But the reader is bound to ask, What's new? Is there any reason to think that judicial competence has declined in recent years? Surely there have been fools and knaves on the bench for a long time. There is the very old story, presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 apocryphal a·poc·ry·phal  
adj.
1. Of questionable authorship or authenticity.

2. Erroneous; fictitious: "Wildly apocryphal rumors about starvation in Petrograd . . .
 but nonetheless suggestive, of the English trial judge so prone to error that an appellate opinion reversing him began, "The decision below is by Judge X, but there are additional grounds for reversal." Boot himself quotes the familiar riddle, "What do you call a lawyer with an IQ of 80?" The answer: "Your honor."

Although judicial folly and knavery knav·er·y  
n. pl. knav·er·ies
1. Dishonest or crafty dealing.

2. An instance of trickery or mischief.


knavery
Noun

pl -eries
 are not easy to quantify, there are structural reasons to suspect that both are on the rise. During the last 40 years, the proportion of lawyers in the population has doubled, and the number of judges has followed suit. For example, there was one federal judge for every 560,000 people in 1960 and one for every 300,000 in 1993. Unless the share of the populace with the attributes necessary for good judging has risen equally, or the relative attractions of the field have increased, the system must be relying on an increasing proportion of ill-suited people.

It seems unlikely that the percentage of people who combine integrity, fairness, learning, and reasoning ability has been skyrocketing. Furthermore, caseload case·load  
n.
The number of cases handled in a given period, as by an attorney or by a clinic or social services agency.


caseload
Noun
 increases have made the job less rather than more attractive; no longer can a federal judgeship be thought of as simply an honorable retirement. Pay generally does no more than keep pace with inflation, and rather erratically at that. Meanwhile, the increased demand for reasoning skills throughout the economy has raised the opportunity cost of being a judge.

In one respect judging may have become a more appealing task, but it is not one that is likely to increase the quality of judges. As the Supreme Court has constitutionalized additional areas of law, and as it, together with lower courts, Congress, and state legislatures, have created new fields for judicial monitoring of the workplace and other realms that used to get along without intense judicial supervision, the chance for judges to throw their weight around has increased dramatically. This may enhance the appeal of judgeships, but probably not for persons with generous helpings of integrity, fairness, learning, and reasoning ability.

Is there a message in this for the law professors who conduct the lofty debate on the proper judicial role in constitutional interpretation? The professors, of course, hold few illusions about Supreme Court justices: They know in their bones that the justices are not as smart as they, and in many cases they are doubtless right. But the professors believe that if the principles governing constitutional law could be understood properly (i.e., if their views were accepted), even the current justices could manage the system tolerably well.

Let's assume the professors' optimism is justified. At some point they ought to confront the legal world below the Supreme Court. As the proportion of human activities subject to judicial management grows, there will be more need for judicial troops out there on the front lines, making factual findings that can be reversed only if "clearly erroneous" and making legal decisions that are never even reviewed because the loser's potential gain is not worth the cost of an appeal. The quality of many of those front-line troops will fall far below that of Supreme Court justices. Though the Court may be able to correct most of the more extreme misinterpretations of its work, many will slip through. As one federal appellate judge famous for the frequency of his reversals by the Court is reported to have said, "They can't catch me every time." Boot performs a useful service in highlighting this problem.

The book is slightly schizophrenic in that it wanders between examples of incompetence and corruption, almost always involving the lower courts, and examples of arrogance, a more pervasive and ultimately perhaps more dangerous failing. In the lower courts arrogance takes various forms, from demanding preposterous kowtowing by counsel to giving the Supreme Court's constitutional interpretations extravagant readings that plunge the judge into management of problems that belong in the hands of the politically responsible (as with the prison hot pots and school planetarium). At the Supreme Court level the problem of arrogance involves milder versions of the same readiness to supplant political solutions based on wispy wisp  
n.
1. A small bunch or bundle, as of straw, hair, or grass.

2.
a. One that is thin, frail, or slight.

b. A thin or faint streak or fragment, as of smoke or clouds.

3.
 constitutional theories.

It cannot be said that Boot offers any rigorous new approach that would intelligibly cabin judicial discretion. And his tendency to drift back and forth between the Supreme Court's actual rulings and lower courts' extravagant or nonsensical applications weakens his case. While the Court should bear in mind the risk of misapplications, it is unfair to treat them as if they were part of the doctrine.

There is one respect in which Boot's focus on the judiciary may let the bar off too easily (though he includes much of the raw material for an indictment of attorneys). In states with elective judiciaries, heavily beholden be·hold·en  
adj.
Owing something, such as gratitude, to another; indebted.



[Middle English biholden, past participle of biholden, to observe; see behold.
 to lawyers for campaign funds, courts have struck down attempts at tort reform based on highly imaginative state constitutional doctrines. Here it may be appropriate to see the judges mainly as the lawyers' agents, protecting their opportunities to use the legal system for lucrative wealth transfers. While the courts may fairly be criticized for assuming this role, that shouldn't let the lawyers off the hook.

Many of the solutions that Boot offers fit into the "we should all do better" category. We should pick better judges; the politicians involved in judicial selection should act more responsibly, at least looking at the track record of sitting judges being considered for appointment to higher courts. Of course we should and they should. But the forces that make politicians neglect these issues - such as the absence of any large political payoff from insisting on high quality, and the fact that the pickers themselves may not be jurisprudential giants - are hard to overcome with exhortation. Moreover, to the extent that the problem is an arrogant displacement of either private ordering or legislative choice, it is unclear that greater scrutiny by the selectors will help. If they share the assumptions that underlie what Boot calls the "juristocracy," more attention to selection may just yield more-skilled juristocrats.

Based on the old saw that daylight is the best disinfectant, Boot argues that cameras in the courtroom would chasten chas·ten  
tr.v. chas·tened, chas·ten·ing, chas·tens
1. To correct by punishment or reproof; take to task.

2. To restrain; subdue: chasten a proud spirit.

3.
 the worst judges. But there is also the risk that the extra exposure will bring out the worst in the pretentious and arrogant people who seem to make up a hefty portion of the bench. Some of Boot's proposals are even more naive. He suggests that Congress might, without a constitutional amendment, require a two-thirds majority of the Supreme Court for any decision to invalidate a statute. His theory: Congress controls the number of Supreme Court justices and could make the number three; if it were to make the number three, then a two-thirds majority would be necessary as a matter of arithmetic; ergo, Congress can specify a two-thirds majority regardless of the number of justices it ordains. Without trying to evaluate the constitutionality of such a statute, I think one can safely call this reasoning flaky flaky - (Or "flakey") Subject to frequent lossage. This use is of course related to the common slang use of the word to describe a person as eccentric, crazy, or just unreliable. .

Boot makes one point, however, the mere assertion of which is surely valuable: He trashes the notion, carefully fostered by the American Bar Association American Bar Association (ABA), voluntary organization of lawyers admitted to the bar of any state. Founded (1878) largely through the efforts of the Connecticut Bar Association, it is devoted to improving the administration of justice, seeking uniformity of law , that judges should be above political denunciation. This stance is especially hypocritical for the ABA, which wholeheartedly whole·heart·ed  
adj.
Marked by unconditional commitment, unstinting devotion, or unreserved enthusiasm: wholehearted approval.



whole
 favors a swashbuckling swash·buck·le  
intr.v. swash·buck·led, swash·buck·ling, swash·buck·les
To act as a swashbuckler, as in a movie or play.



[Back-formation from swashbuckler.
 brand of constitutional interpretation under which judges would enshrine en·shrine   also in·shrine
tr.v. en·shrined, en·shrin·ing, en·shrines
1. To enclose in or as if in a shrine.

2. To cherish as sacred.
 the left's currently favored doctrines. I'm not sure how many observers of the bench are holding back on account of the ABA's precept An order, writ, warrant, or process. An order or direction, emanating from authority, to an officer or body of officers, commanding that officer or those officers to do some act within the scope of their powers. Rule imposing a standard of conduct or action. . But if there are some, and they read Out of Order, they will surely now cut loose a barrage of pent-up criticism.

Implicit in the book is a more fundamental approach: the thought, which will be congenial to REASON readers, that the courts have wrested far too much power away from systems of private ordering, most obviously markets. But a libertarian looking to the book for a careful exploration of this idea will be disappointed. Theory, whether of political economy or of the narrower field of defining the judicial role, is not Boot's strong suit. At least not in this book.

So read it and weep. Or laugh, depending on your disposition. Out of Order will give you a visceral sense visceral sense
n.
The perception of the presence of the internal organs. Also called splanchnesthesia, splanchnesthetic sensibility.
 of the judicial establishment's dregs dregs
Noun, pl

1. solid particles that settle at the bottom of some liquids

2. the dregs the worst or most despised elements: the dregs of colonial society [Old Norse dregg
, without which you cannot realistically appraise the whole.

Stephen F. Williams Stephen F. Williams (born 1936) is a judge appointed to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in June 1986, and took senior status in September 2001.

He graduated from Yale College (B.A. 1958) Magna Cum Laude and from Harvard Law School (J.D.
 (stephen_f_williams@cadc.uscourts.gov) is a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia District of Columbia, federal district (2000 pop. 572,059, a 5.7% decrease in population since the 1990 census), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), on the east bank of the Potomac River, coextensive with the city of Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States).  Circuit.
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Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Williams, Stephen F.
Publication:Reason
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Nov 1, 1998
Words:1753
Previous Article:Judges in the dock. (judicial corruption)
Next Article:Straussed out. (philosopher, intellectual and political scientist Leo Strauss)
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