Advisory Opinions - Originalism v. Common Law
Episode Date: May 7, 2024Judge Edmund Sargus from the Southern District of Ohio joins Sarah and David to take on originalism and different means of constitutional interpretation. The Agenda: —Brown v. Board of Education an...d the different judicial philosophies that can be applied to the case —Originalism vs. common law traditionalism —Challenges and limitations of textualism and originalism —Landmark cases and the Supreme Court’s decisions shaping societal progress —Interpreting ambiguous constitutional terms like ‘equal protection’ and ‘due process’ —Thus ends DEI Show Notes: —Plessy v. Ferguson —Rutan v. Republican Party —Bostock v. Clayton County —Loving v. Virginia —A blast from the past: Rep. James A. Traficant found guilty of corruption —David for the NYT: The Magic Constitutionalism of Donald Trump —Seceding from Secession: The Civil War, Politics, and the Creation of West Virginia —Fifth Circuit opinion from Judge Andrew Oldham Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Ready?
I was born ready.
Welcome to Advisory Opinions. I'm Sarah Isger, that's David French, and this is the long-awaited episode. It's maybe
four, five years in the making, David. It is. It is. Because today, we have a guest who is going to
take on originalism head on. And maybe more importantly, that guest isn't just any guest.
It's Judge Edmund Sargas from the Southern District of Ohio, who's come to really explain
a different judicial philosophy that we've been having a conversation back and forth now for
about a year. I met Judge Sargas at Legal Eagles in Gettysburg last year, and it's been one of the
most rewarding conversations of my legal career.
And Judge, I'm so thrilled that you're here
and willing to share some of your thoughts
with our audience.
Well, thank you, Sarah.
And thanks to you and David for inviting me.
As you know, I am a very avid listener of podcasts.
So let me first give kudos to both of you.
I really enjoy that you are able to address
controversial subjects in a way that treats
different sides of the debate fairly. I don't think we do enough these days to talk to each other
about divisive issues. I think people, I'm one of them, oftentimes avoid topics like this so we don't
end up getting in arguments with people we respect and like, but don't want to necessarily disagree with.
So what I'm hoping we can do today is to ferret out different ways of looking at constitutional interpretation.
I will tell you as we begin, I am not a believer that one size fits all. I think originalism has its place.
I think the common law, organic view, has its place.
I think the common law organic view has its place. And I should also add a caveat.
As a district judge, the one thing I tell new members of our court when they start,
we never ever get the final word on major issues of constitutionalism.
The losing side will take it to the Court of Appeals.
The Court of Appeals owes us no deference when it comes to a pure legal question.
So I've written some cases on some important issues, a few of which have mattered just
in the scheme of things. We do obviously apply the Constitution in Section 1983 cases a lot.
But when I say apply, it's more to see if a party has enough to get to trial, and then
we try the cases. But making new law on fresh constitutional issues
is not my day-to-day work.
Well, Judge, I have to say, I'm so excited you're here.
Very happy to have this conversation.
Really been looking forward to it.
And I just have to share the most Sarah thing ever, listeners.
So I get an email and it's all caps says,
hold on to your butts.
And I'm like, what is this?
What is this?
And it's Sarah announcing that Judge Sargas
is coming on the podcast, which I'm equally excited about.
Like I've never heard the hold on to your butts phrase.
I thought Sarah came up with it.
I now know it's Samuel L. Jackson.
And then I look up and in the two line,
Judge Sargas is included.
And I'm, you know, practiced for a long time
and I have this sense that when you're interacting
with a judge, even in social circumstances,
there's a degree of formality, right?
There's a degree of, we latch into our talking to a judge voice, if that makes sense.
And I just thought like that is the most phenomenal, like just best, hey,
this is a great ceremonial of just treating people like people.
I love it.
Look, law students do what I say, not what I do. This was not,
I'd like to me, that's like my highest like OMG. Like from the 90s. It's not appropriate
and I shouldn't have done it. Okay. Judge Sargas. We can take that out of the podcast.
I like that. I like that a lot. Judge Zargas, like David, likes to say,
where you stand depends on where you sit.
So I thought we should start with, how would you say you got here?
You were the U.S. attorney.
You were appointed by President Clinton.
How did you become a judge?
Everybody has a story, as you know.
So I grew up in a little town of St. Clairsville, Ohio,
a wonderful little town of 5,000 people, about 10 miles from Wheeling, West
Virginia. I knew growing up, I wanted to be a lawyer. My late father was a
lawyer. I also enjoyed government. My father died very young, but he was in
government. He was a state senator. Some people grew up memorizing baseball
statistics. I could tell you the county chairs
all around Ohio when I was 15 years old. So I eventually ended up working campaigns for
two U.S. senators who became close friends, John Glenn and Howard Metzenbaum. And when
the position came over for U.S. attorney, it was, I wouldn't say that I was the obvious choice. I would say I was
their choice and did that job for about three and a half years. And then judicial vacancy
came open and I've been in this job for the last 27 and a half years. I also practiced
law for 15 years in a little town. I always liked to channel Abraham Lincoln. What I tell
you, some of the disputes had some pretty interesting rings to them, neighborhood disputes that could
escalate sometimes.
We get a lot of different kinds of cases.
Ohio has a funny law that if you're a farmer and you put a fence on one side of your property
line, you can build the other side for half of it because they're getting the benefit.
And I did a few of those.
I had a psychiatrist who bought a farm as a place
to get away and the neighbor who was a farmer
didn't like him and wrote a nasty letter saying,
I'm building a farm one fourth of the way
across our common boundary and you're gonna pay
for half of it thinking you drive them away.
The psychiatrist had me send a letter back, oh no not once for I'm building the rest of
it and you're gonna pay me the half that's much more than what you had planned on and
the matter went away.
So I had a lot of cases like that.
And you're married to a judge as well.
I am.
You're poor children.
I know that it is unfortunate for them.
But yes, my wife was a judge before I was.
She was a common please judge in St. Clairsville for 24 years and has some very interesting
cases herself.
Yeah.
What does a judge of that, like what does she do?
Because I think our listeners know what a federal judge does.
We all spend a lot of time on local judges.
In Ohio, the common please court is the highest level court.
It would be comparable to the district court, only under state law.
So felonies, civil cases, equity powers, the whole nine yards.
What we always joked about is when someone filed a lawsuit that she drew,
and she was in a two-judge court, and the other side would be moved
to the federal court, sometimes they'd bounce from one judge, Sargas to the other.
And I'd always get a big kick out of that.
Judge, I'm convinced that the best dinner companion that you can find is someone who's
practiced law in a small town for, say, 15, 20 years. Because the stories that they are going to
have are going to absolutely blow your mind. That is true. You know, the law walks in the doors, we call it, and people would show up with problems.
And yeah, one of the things you can't do much in a little town is specialize.
So at a certain point, we didn't do any criminal work.
But the civil side is you can guess everything from black lung cases to tort claims to all
sorts of things.
All right.
Let's do this.
So I thought perhaps the best place to start is Brown versus Board of Education, because
I think across the board, regardless of your judicial philosophy, you want Brown to come
out the right way.
And so it's almost a reverse engineering thing.
We can go through various judicial philosophies, but you need to make sure that Brown v. Board of Education
comes out to say that racial segregation in schools
is unconstitutional, that separate but equal
is unconstitutional.
And what's sort of fun about also starting
with Brown v. Board of Education
is that the opinion
itself is incredibly short and there's just so little to it.
It was a unanimous opinion.
If you remember, it was argued twice because there was a lot going on at the court at the
time.
They were basically waiting for some changes to happen to some court personnel.
This was the new Chief Justice Warren's, really his first major case.
Of course, he was going to go on to have a lot of major cases, though none ever, I think,
as big as Brown really.
The opinion says a few things.
One, it says, we looked at the 14th Amendment,
and you know what?
We can't tell either way.
Shrug, moving on.
Second, we don't necessarily think
that racial segregation is a problem exactly,
but, like that separate but equal
is inherently unconstitutional,
but, and then the opinion really hinged on this psychological data that even if the schools
are totally equal in teachers and quality and all of those stuff, there is a psychological impact
of segregating children that makes black students feel inferior. And that is bad. And therefore,
school segregation is unconstitutional. It's like kind of a weird opinion that I'm not sure a lot of people would necessarily defend
as that judicial philosophy being their own.
I think part of the reason why it's kind of fun is because there's like only a six paragraph
opinion, it's really short. You can take the facts of Brown and
say, here's how it should have been decided in terms of the judicial philosophy and reasoning.
So Judge, we've talked a little bit about Brown from an originalist standpoint. You
think that originalism would not get to the unconstitutionality of racial segregation
and more to the point, and I think you're going to call it common law traditionalism,
you think that it is the better method. So take it away.
Well, first of all, the Supreme Court itself, nine to nothing said that the answer would
not be found in what the framers of the 14th Amendment and the ratifiers would have said.
I've gone back and read the debates, and there's no mention of blacks and whites going to school
together.
There's a lot of history, and there are bits and pieces we can take, as you'd expect.
This was ratified by three-fourths of the states.
There are a lot of people speaking in the Florida debates.
There are a lot of things said.
One of the main sponsors, John Bingham, who by the way, would have been my
member of Congress had I lived in St. Clairsville in the 1860s, he actually went to school with
African Americans and had lifetime friendships with the people he went to school with. So
you can look at him and make a little bit of a point. But I think the important thing is, in Brown,
the Supreme Court asked the litigants
to brief something close to original intent.
What did the framers of the 14th Amendment
mean when it came to school segregation versus integration?
And they said two things.
One, it can't be discerned.
And two, in the end, it really isn't going to be
what determines the outcome. That instead, if we look at a common law approach, meaning one that
starts with deference to precedent, continuity being a good thing, and a break with the past
only when necessary. They focused, as you remember, on education having fundamentally changed
at the time of the ratification of the 14th Amendment in 1868 to their decision in 1954
to become such an important feature in American life that the foundations for Plessy versus
Ferguson, for example, were no longer good law. So as you know, Justice Scalia took a shot at this
in his dissent in Rutan versus the Republican Party. And the statement he made that, and I agree with
it, was that, quote, in his view, the 14th Amendment requirement for equal protection of laws
combined with the 13th Amendment's abolition
of the institution of slavery, leaves no room for doubt that laws treating people differently
because of their race are invalid. I completely agree with that statement. I don't agree that's
originalism though. I think that's something very different.
Well, that's a great, I think that's a great place to kind of define our terms because one of the interesting things about originalism
to me is that when I was learning originalism,
I felt like I learned it in a way
that was a little deceptive.
That advocates of originalism sort of put it like, okay,
and I've used this analogy before,
it's like you're an archeologist and you're digging
and you finally find like the stone
that demonstrates that King David actually existed, you know, back in biblical times
or whatever. You're digging through history and you're finding the nuggets that really
make something sort of indisputably, one reading indisputably more correct than the other.
Whereas in reality, it's actually more
of a framework for how we decide things. It's not something that's going to guarantee a
particular kind that two originalists, in other words, can disagree on the same case.
And so, which was not something that I had sort of thought in my youth when you're talking about originalism.
And I've now read a lot of different kind
of definitions of it.
Is it original public meaning?
What is original public meaning?
The text history and tradition approach, what does that mean?
How do you define originalism, Judge?
When you hear someone say, I'm an originalist,
what are you hearing them say?
Well, I'm gonna start on a light note.
You and Sarah have put me to my steps over the weekend.
You had an article within the last week
in the New York Times,
speaking of originalism, what's the definition?
It starts with what you just said,
to discern the common, ordinary meaning of the words,
and second, at the time of the document's adoption.
Now to be clear, I think there are lots of times originalism can be really helpful
in deciding how to interpret the Constitution. I wouldn't say forget it. I think what's
oftentimes going to be absolutely definitive is just the simple words of the text.
When the Constitution says you have to be 35 to be president,
When the Constitution says you have to be 35 to be president, we wouldn't be debating, maybe we could be debating this year, whether people were too young or too old, but the
courts aren't tasked with that.
The words are absolutely clear.
That's the end of it.
It's words like, in the Brown case, equal protection, due process, those are the kinds
of things where I think originalism
clashes with a common law approach because the world has changed. The common law assumes
progress by the way. Originalism assumes going backwards. I think the two pull in different
directions, but at different times they may speak to a particular part of the Constitution.
So I think there's also the way that textualism interacts with
originalism that we have to talk about in order to make some
progress here because and I'll use Bostock as an example.
And mind you, there was a big fight among conservatives over
the textualism and originalism of Bostock.
And look, the shorthand is that textualism applies to statutes
and originalism applies to the Constitution, but that really you're doing the same thing.
Bostock was statutory, so we use textualism for that. But I also think that intuitively,
you think about different things when you use the word originalism and you use the word textualism.
So I want to use the word textualism a little bit, is what I'm getting at. So in Bostock, it was about the word sex, sex discrimination, basically.
And there wasn't really much question that at the time of the Civil Rights Act, nobody
thought that the word sex would include a man putting on women's clothing to go to work.
But what Gorsuch was saying was,
nevertheless, that is what sex meant.
You were discriminating on someone
based on the characterization or stereotypes of their sex.
So skirts aren't inherently one thing or another.
So if a man wears a skirt,
the only reason you're mad at him is because of the stereotype that women wear skirts. And therefore,. So if a man wears a skirt, the only reason you're mad at him
is because of the stereotype that women wear skirts.
And therefore, if you were a woman wearing a skirt,
you wouldn't have that opinion.
Therefore, you're discriminating on the basis of sex.
Okay, that's like my rough boss doc thing here.
And so when we think then back to Brown
and about equal protection,
the, I think you're right,
the originalism that people think of
is would they have thought that school segregation was constitutional at the time of the ratification
of the 14th Amendment?
But a different way to think about that is when they said equal protection of the laws,
whether they understood that they were including school segregation or not, did they mean that you could not distinguish between two people based solely on their race?
I will grant you that actually even the historical record on that isn't 100% one way or the other
as we learned during the affirmative action briefing and oral arguments at the Supreme
Court in the Harvard case, but it is different.
And I think this gets to a problem with all forms of judicial philosophy.
At what level of generality are we doing this game?
And you know, Justice Breyer has a version of your, he wouldn't call it, I don't think,
common law.
He calls it traditionalism.
But it's the same idea.
His is a purpose-based test. What was the purpose of this law as best I can
discern it? And how can I best effectuate that purpose? But the
problem is, what level of generality are you going to
define the purpose? Because at some point, the generality of
any purpose is, well, they were trying to make the country
better. And so I'm going to come up with the way that makes the
country better. So that is my pushback on textualism versus originalism definitionally.
And I'm not sure it's a good thing for textualism and originalism,
because it means that you can kind of play a little fast and loose.
Is it whether they thought it would apply to this specific question back then,
or is it simply what the words meant back then?
So I'm first here. I'm not a big ism person.
We'll put common law, we'll call it common-law-ism, just so I haven't excluded that.
But you know, the Bostig is a great example of the difference between originalism and
textualism, as you said.
One of the arguments for that distinction is that if Congress disagreed with the interpretation
of the statute, it could amend the statute,
not so when it comes to the Constitution.
But the two things I would argue in the Obergefell case,
Justice Kennedy had to know that you're not
going to go back in the 14th Amendment ratification
period and fight any mention of gay rights. Didn't exist. We know that you're not going to go back in the 14th Amendment ratification period and fight
any mention of gay rights. Didn't exist. We know that. And yet, I love his quote, the nature of
injustice is that we may not always see it in our own times. The generation that wrote and ratified
the Bill of Rights in the 14th Amendment did not presume to know the extent of freedom in all of
its dimensions. So they entrusted the future generations a charter protecting the rights of all persons. I love that. I think that's exactly right.
We're going to make your case harder on Brown. Okay? Well, there may be some ambiguity in
the historical record. That's what the Supreme Court said. How about miscegenation laws?
There's no ambiguity. I went back and read this morning. This was
the canard the opponents of the 14th Amendment would use. If you passed the 14th Amendment,
then your daughters and wives are going to be marrying freed black slaves. And the Republicans
uniformly said that's a bugger bear. A bugger bear was one of them. They had all sorts of
words saying, whatever, we get into this debate about
African-Americans, you always pulled this out.
Everybody knows that's not what this is about.
They completely disclaimed any intention to fight a constitutional
right of blacks and whites to marry.
Yet in 1967, a unanimous Supreme Court finds exactly that.
That's where originalism can't take you.
I agree.
Where traditionalism and common law will take you there, though.
So this gets to another fun question, I think, about different judicial philosophies. And
it's worth noting, Justice Scalia did not think that originalism was the be all and
end all. It was something like democracy, right? It's the worst form of judicial philosophy
except for all the others it has faults
But those faults are less than the faults of other judicial philosophies
And you know he listed one of the faults as it's really hard to go figure out the history
It can be voluminous. It can be ambiguous all of those things and second
He said originalism could be a medicine quote too strong to swallow and I think that's what we have here because
we Want the Constitution to have protected interracial marriage, just like we wanted the Constitution to protect
gay marriage, for instance. But here's the question.
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And this gets to a congress do-your-job, but it's, I think, much easier to say, like, look,
we have a Congress, they can do this, blah, blah, blah.
It's much harder if you need a constitutional amendment.
Now, I actually do not believe that interracial marriage needed a constitutional amendment.
There was nothing that we were overriding in the Constitution.
There's nothing that banned interracial marriage, but you certainly needed a statute to do it.
So I think some of the questions that you have to answer is, wouldn't it have been okay
if Loving v. Virginia had turned out the other way and that the enormous amount of political
pressure that would have been put on Congress at that point, because at that point, by the
way, it was, you know, the tides had very much turned on this question.
Isn't that fine if then Congress just had to pass a statute and
supersede a Supreme Court decision?
Okay.
But to counter that in a, in a, in a nice smiley way.
Okay.
On that theory, we don't need to throw an emojis at me.
On that theory, we don't need a bill of rights.
It would be better if Congress passed the
Miranda warning. It would be better if Congress passed New York Times versus Sullivan. But
we have a constitution to make sure that certain kind of fundamental rights are not left to
the majority. So waiting for Congress to act is another way of saying, we're waiting for
a majority rule to overtake this. And sometimes that isn't going to happen. Or if
it's going to happen, it's going to happen generations too late.
That that was the essence of our constitution was to enshrine
these sort of fundamental rights and take them out of the wheel
of the majority.
Of course, in the case of Brown v Board of Education, the
Supreme Court said that school segregation was unconstitutional,
unlawful, they were ahead of the culture on that one.
And so what happened?
Schools did not desegregate for 10 plus years
until Congress acted.
So what I think the history shows
is that if the Supreme Court acts before the culture,
the culture waits for the culture.
If the Supreme Court acts in a way
that is already directionally where the culture is going,
and here I'm thinking about Obergefell,
then it just kind of happens.
You're right, maybe a few years earlier
than Congress would have done something.
And then you have Roe v. Wade,
where the Supreme Court acts sort of different,
like just sort of in a moment where it's unclear
which way the culture is going.
And then it creates 50 years of political havoc.
Let me push back a little bit on Brown versus Board.
Certainly, there was a role for Congress to play.
By the way, before Brown versus Board, as you know,
I'm going to guess most of you listeners do,
there were a lot of things happening in the 30s and 40s
in the area of race relations.
The military was integrated by order of the president.
There were several Supreme Court cases before Brown that made it clear the court was taking
a hard look at segregation.
So this wasn't completely out of the blue.
And in the 1950s, think of Little Rock, there were courts enforcing Brown versus Board.
There was President Eisenhower sending in troops to make sure the order was enforced. So the country was moving. Truly part of the country wasn't moving though. And that's
what this case did. So I think it did probably push school integration by at least a generation
or two in some states ahead. Roe v. Wade, I want to be careful here because I can be stuck with some cases in this area.
That's a different issue where the Supreme Court didn't settle the case.
An extreme example I would use is Dred Scott.
The Chief Justice at the time thought that the Supreme Court was going to put the slavery
issue to bed, did exactly the opposite.
So there are times in our history where the Supreme Court has pushed far away
from public opinion and led to regret.
So I would put Brown in the category of one that worked,
Dred Scott being the extreme opposite example,
lots of cases in between.
But the one thing we can say about Roe
is that it did not settle the issue.
And that's probably, I think, something we could all agree on.
This is where, let me make your case for you for a minute.
I need all the help I can get.
Let me make your case for you for a minute in what I call the difference between good
originalism and bad originalism.
So I think of good originalism as when you're taking the words on the page as the words on the page of the Constitution are their paramount.
And to the extent that any historical background helps us amplify or explain those words on
the page to give them force and effect, that would be what I would think of as good originalism.
Here's what bad originalism is.
Bad originalism is when you have the words on the page
and then you go into history to explain why the words
on the page don't mean what they actually say.
And this is where we get into some of the equal protection issues.
And so, for example, if you had an originalism that privileged the words
on the page more than anything else,
you don't need the 19th Amendment granting women the right to vote because it seems to
me that denying women the right to vote is a clear violation of the term equal protection
or privilege or immunity of citizenship.
So in that sense, it feels like the 19th Amendment exists because there was a determined
effort or a feeling or a sense or an original public meaning that equal protection did not
actually mean equal protection.
And that's why one of the reasons why I go back and as you're noting, Judge, I used a
Judge Newsom's definition of originalism in a piece I wrote
last week for The Times that talks about the most important element is text.
Text is the most important element.
And I feel like there is a version of originalism, and I've explained it poorly, that previously,
that weirdly enough de-escalates orates or deprivileges,
de-emphasizes the text.
And it seems as if some of the common law elements
you're talking about actually in an interesting way
might privilege the text a bit more
by giving the text its full force and meaning over time.
Is that a fair, would you say that's a fair description?
I do.
The trouble with words like equal protection due process
is that they're not self-defining.
So originalism when it comes to women would say,
look, there was a push in 1866 to 1868
to put women in the 14th Amendment.
It failed.
So it's hard to see how a court could come along and say, wait a minute, equal protection
means women have a right to vote.
That took a constitutional amendment.
Today we see that as, well, that should have been an easy decision to make.
Women should have equal rights.
Blacks should have equal rights.
We could say the same thing with the benefit of hindsight about about gays.
But but there's more. And what is the limit?
I mean, what groups are included?
You know, you're familiar with the famous footnote in Coraline Products case.
They had a definition of what groups could be included.
That certainly wasn't from the text, wasn't from
the historical records of the people who framed the amendment. But it did seem to me consistent with what
our whole structure of government is supposed to be about, which is to protect minority
rights from having fundamental rights infringed upon, but at the same time let the country
be governed by the will of the people in all other regards. But I think equal protection is the hard one because it just doesn't have an easy, I used
to have red hair before I turned gray, but I've always wondered if red hairs should be
a group protected by equal protection. But so far no one's bought that.
Well, David, though, under the boss doc reading, I think women would have had the right to vote
under the 14th Amendment, right? Oh, yeah. Under a boss doc type of textual reading, I think women would have had the right to vote under the 14th Amendment, right?
Oh, yeah.
Under a boss doc type of textualism, I mean.
Absolutely.
You're 100% correct.
Like a text-privileged, a ritualism that privileges the text to such a degree that you're only
moving towards the historical meaning when the text, I mean, men can vote
and women cannot seems to be about as basic an equal protection violation as the words
on the page could convey.
And yet the original public meaning was, oh, no, oh, no, equal protection does not mean
this at all.
And that's what I mean by originalism undermining text, as opposed to originalism
amplifying or helping us understand text, if that makes sense. And that's been my issue
with it.
Let me get the Justice Scalia story in here. There was a case that I'm sorry, I don't have
the citation in front of me. It was pretty early, 1990, 1991. And I remember the facts
there was a male working on an oil rig. It was a pretty
rough place to work. He was gay and he just had enormous amounts of harassment to the point he
quit, bought a lawsuit. And Justice Scalia said sex means sex, that he had been a woman who liked
men. That would have been fine, but he was a man who liked men. It was because of, that's the words from Title VII. And that was out there, didn't make a lot of news.
And the Sixth Circuit, where it was covered, had several cases after that that said that
gays were not protected by Title VII. So as a district judge, I'm in the spot of, well,
the Supreme Court said the opposite
and the Sixth Circuit tells me it's not so. What do I do? I followed the Supreme Court.
This was before Bostic. And then of course, Bostic cleared it all up.
So let's get back then to Scalia's point that originalism is the worst, except all the others.
And, and let's talk about what tools you use in your common lawism to discern the meaning.
Are you looking at things like the legislative record or purpose like Justice Breyer suggests?
You mentioned sort of the easy things, precedent, that you do, of course, look to the text.
But it feels like everyone's willing to talk
about the easy stuff that all sounds good.
Get to the hard part of yours.
What is the problem with common lawism?
Well, what I like about common lawism
has a lot to do with where I sit in the system.
I'm a trial court judge.
If I can digress sentencing for a moment.
Digress on this podcast? My goodness, who could imagine such a thing, sir? trial court judge. And if I can digress sentencing for a moment.
Digress on this podcast?
My goodness.
Who could imagine such a thing, sir?
What I hear in this demand for certain, in other words, show us the principles, show
us how cases should come out under a process, an ism, so to speak.
That rings in my mind of this federal sentencing guidelines.
And so we have to take the judging out of judging.
We have to take any discretion out of sentencing.
And then it's turned out over the last almost 40 years that they've been in effect,
that it doesn't work like that.
The cases are too unique.
There's the different kinds of crimes are too varied.
So what we have instead is a system that says, here's what a typical judge did over the last
30 years before we promulgated these guidelines.
And that's a starting point for you.
Start there.
And if you think the sentence is too high, explain it.
If you think it's too low, explain that.
So I think there's a lot more judgment that goes into this in a specific case than just
having an ism.
But what I do like about the common law side is you start with what's the precedent?
And that in most cases should carry the day, that we have an idea that the past wasn't all bad,
that other judges got this right.
Now, you know, what's changed?
Once in a while, Brown, for example, or Loving, things have changed,
and you need to explain why they've changed. And you need to explain why
they've changed. And you need to move this forward.
What had changed in Loving?
In Loving, what has changed is a hundred years of our history. That we, as a nation, began
to realize that it was shameful how African Americans were treated, that they should have
equal citizenship. And the public had moved in that direction as well. It's not a popularity contest, but it has some sense of where the public is and
where certain rights aren't being protected.
And the argument I would make is just like with originalism,
either one can get this wrong.
The court could be too far ahead under a common law theory.
They could.
And you can probably use Tred Scott common law
and it would be a bad outcome. There are three amendments to the Constitution that overruled
Supreme Court cases. So that's part of our history. The Dodge case shows that over time,
if the opinions are unpopular, that there is a way to change the composition of the court. But I don't think either originalism or the common law approach is foolproof. I
think our system is based on the idea that each branch of government is capable of mistakes.
That's why we had the three branches of government. But I don't think one has an advantage over
the other in terms of judges run loose, whatever you want to call it. Can you give us an example of a time where you applied your common law-ism
and it came out differently from the way you think it, you would have wanted it to come out?
Well, I was going to, facetiously, but also in real life, I'd only had one
constitutional case where I felt I was deciding an issue, coal, from scratch.
Do you remember a congressman from Youngstown named Jim Trafickett?
Of course.
Okay.
So, fascinating guy.
I'll cut this short because he could dominate the rest of the show.
But he was expelled from Congress after having been convicted in federal court of income
tax evasion and bribery.
But he hung on to the bitter end.
They actually had a trial on the floor of the house. He defended himself, didn't have counsel.
They expelled him. In the meantime, there had been a census. The state had been,
the state government had reapportioned the congressional lines, and his congressional
district basically was disappearing. So I think the vacancy occurred sometime in October of the last of two years of that term. As you know, the Constitution says
no one can be appointed to the House. There has to be a special election, and it
says the executive of the state must order an election. Well, the way the
math would work out, if you put all this together, had an election, they'd get somebody in office towards
the end of December. And the term ended in January, and the whole seat ended in January,
January 1, to be exact. So both the chair of the Democratic Party, chair of the Republican
Party wrote a letter to the governor saying, shouldn't do this, big waste of time, and
whoever gets the seat is going to be gone in just a few days. So the ACLU sued the governor of Ohio at the time, Robert Taft. I got the case. There's really
nothing comparable to that. So honestly, I looked at the text and thought there's mischief here.
If a Republican governor held up a Democratic seat for a year and a half. That doesn't have any appeal.
There's also no sense of that happening here when both parties have asked the governor
not to hold an election. So I basically said that this is a situation where the Constitution
was meant to be practical. On the one hand, if there were any showing of any sort of abuse
of discretion by the governor,
I would order an election because the Constitution didn't have a maybe, it said shall. So just so
you know how persuasive my opinion was, I was reversed three to nothing by the teacher. So
that's not the kind of case I normally bump into. It was a very kind reversal, by the way.
And it was after they took the case,
even though the term had ended, because they
found it was capable of repetition, which was right.
So what did they say?
Now I'm just curious.
They said that shell means shell,
and that this could be abused, and that there
should have been an election.
But no, what I wanted to emphasize
is that this is not my daily line of work where I
apply regionalism versus textualism versus common law.
It's just a view from having looked at this.
And frankly, I've always had a great interest in the history of the 14th Amendment.
You know, one thing that I think is very helpful about this conversation, because again, I
go back to sort of thinking about how these arguments were debated or how these arguments were defined and how we debated these things
when I was in law school and as a younger lawyer where you're sort of thinking through
competing legal philosophies is I think a lot of originalist defenders of originalism
say we're really the only people who truly focus on text, but that's not exactly accurate.
The approach you're talking about is also quite text heavy.
It seems as if the divergence is,
how do we figure out when the text isn't self-defining?
How do we figure out when the text isn't, the term equal protection, as you noted text isn't self-defining? How do we figure out when the text isn't,
the term equal protection, as you noted,
isn't self-defining?
Where do we go when it's not self-defining?
Not the text doesn't matter.
And I think that this has kind of been
the caricatured version of the opposition to originalism.
We originalists make ourselves feel better
because we're the only ones who care about text.
And that's not accurate.
And one aspect of the common law, the other case of interest is US versus Jones.
That's the GPS device on a car and whether a warrant was needed.
If you remember the debate between Justice Scalia and Alito, it was interesting because
Justice Scalia took his right to 1787, talked about what a constable
would do and whether this was a trespass.
And you remember Judge Alito's famous comeback that had to be either a small wagon or a very
large wagon or a very small constable.
They were now judging the constable would be hiding your wagon as a drove away to know
exactly where you went.
There are many times that what the framers meant is important, but in the modern era
when we're talking about a GPS device on a car, that sort of factual analogy, I think,
at least in my view, isn't helpful.
That's what I would call it.
But the words themselves, because there are some things in the Constitution that are quite specific. You know, the idea of having to identify the home to be searched,
that's right in the Fourth Amendment. So, you know, anything like that, that has a clear
meaning, that's the opposite of equal protection, I would argue. That's where the text needs
to carry the bay.
Okay, so how does common lawism differ from living constitutionalism?
It doesn't go backwards. It doesn't say as a starting point, what were they doing in
1868 or 1787? It's okay, we understand how these cases interpreted equal protection before. We will be guided by those
unless something significant has changed that would make us think that the foundations of the
precedent no longer made sense. Okay. How does common lawism differ from
Breyer's purpose-based test? I don't think it's purpose-based as much as a court being sensitive to... Here's the example
I would use, interstate commerce. If in 1789, the first Supreme Court of the United States
had to find what is the meat industry, is it intrastate or interstate? And in those
days, if you killed a cow and didn't have some way to refrigerate it, it would rot in a day or
two.
So you couldn't have meat cutters in Philadelphia selling meat in New York City.
Intrastate not subject to congressional regulation.
But now 115 years later, Chicago has figured out the refrigerated railroad cart, and they
have stockyards that can send frozen meat all across the world.
That's changed. The factual underpinning of that 1789 decision isn't true anymore. The world has changed and the law needs to change with it. That's where the common law tradition accommodates
change. It doesn't change the principles involved, but it does change the application of facts. Yeah, this is so, so helpful to hear you articulate this,
because I do think this is where you're really pushing
on the things that trouble me, Judge.
So let me take another issue.
And this one, you may not be able to really touch it,
because you may have cases.
So let me just throw this out there,
and you cannot respond or not respond.
But for example, the Second Amendment, when it says the right to keep and bear arms.
So an originalist says, arms mean, what is arms?
What does arms mean?
An originalist would say, okay, what we're talking about is weapons that are personal
defense weapons, but also
at the time were military grade weapons.
In other words, the Brown Bess Flintlock musket, which was hanging on over the mantles of a
lot of colonists' fireplaces, was also the weapon that the British regulars used. So therefore, if you're going to regulate an AR-15,
which is, which might be in your gun safe in your house,
which is very similar, not identical,
but very similar to the M4 that I carried in Iraq,
originalism would say that's arms.
But it seems to me that a common lawism approach
would not take, would not look at it that way.
It would say, well, you're allowed to have some weapons.
You're allowed to have some weapons,
but we can't look back to 1868
with the ratification of the 14th Amendment,
which incorporated the second
or go back to the 1787 Constitution and then the Bill of Rights, ratification of the Bill of Rights after the 1787
Constitution, and then determine that. What are arms? That is a process that is evolving through
precedent and case law. Is that, well, you may or may not be able to answer that, but that's how I would interpret
some of the differences between the two.
Well, that's a great question.
So in terms of a common law approach, I'm not sure how that would turn out.
I don't sense, you know, the country's divided on gun issues.
I mean, police says one thing, but there are people with strong opinions on either
side.
I doubt a decision from the Supreme Court would end this debate one way or the other.
So there's a certain amount of, I would like to think for people who really adhere to this
common law idea, there should be a certain hesitancy of jumping into a great undecided
political debate and taking a side.
One thing the common law is supposed to do is maintain respect for the legal system as
a system of laws, not as a system of gratuitous policymakers.
So I'm not sure the common law would lead to any great cataclysmic difference in the gun
area as opposed to originalism.
I think you can make originalism from the common law side, very wouldn't.
You could say, well, if we look to 1787, good luck with your fledlock, right?
Right.
But I don't think that's the only way to do originalism.
I like what you said, which was the gun we're
talking about would be comparable to what a soldier in the Revolutionary War would have
carried. And then you make that same analogy today to an AR-15, for example. I know that's
going to make some of your listeners upset the way I put it, but I think that's the kind
of issue that unless the common law can identify some big change in facts that makes the earlier
precedents, uh, challengeable, uh, no longer good law, uh, I'm not sure this is one where
originalism versus the common law would make that much difference in the final decision
of the court.
I love this.
Judge Sargas, you've been incredibly informative and helpful, and we so appreciate you taking the time
out of your Article III lifetime tenure
to come talk to us about this issue.
Well, I feel very privileged to have a great conversation
with the two of you.
Thank you for inviting me.
Yeah, this has been a real treat, Judge.
It is technically your second time on Advisory Opinions
because in our special Legal Eagles episode we discussed your book on events transpiring in Wheeling, West Virginia.
Yep. Article 4, section 3, how to create a new state out of an existing state.
And plug the book for us because it's actually a pretty fun book.
Well, it's an interesting question of originalism too. This is a very specific part of the Constitution.
They were anticipating new states.
They were also anticipating some states splitting in 1787, Virginia being one of them.
Kentucky was split off.
But the amendment, I'm sorry, the Article IV, Section 3 says that if a state is split,
the state being split has to consent.
So the problem was Virginia seceded, but then West Virginia wanted to split off.
And the question of what kind of consent did West Virginia need when the state that would
otherwise get consent says we're no longer covered by the Constitution.
That was the great dilemma in 1862, 1863.
That's what our book's about.
But I love what West Virginia did to solve the problem. Because Virginia was no longer part
of the Union, West Virginia peeled off, said, now we're Virginia, and us, as the government of
Virginia, now gives consent to West Virginia to peel off. And then basically they disbanded their
Virginia government and became West Virginia. That's exactly what happened. And then basically they disbanded their Virginia government and became West Virginia.
That's exactly what happened. And their biggest supporter, by the way, was one of the main drafters of the 14th Amendment, John Bingham. This district was right alongside West Virginia
on the Ohio side. And his view was once the government's in rebellion, it's no longer
a Republican form of government. The federal government could step in and West Virginia
became a state. Now, it's a lot of grief, though.
And perhaps this brings up the practical side of judicial philosophy because in the moment,
it was incredibly important to have West Virginia separate from Virginia and part of the Union
because important railroad lines ran through there that could move supplies.
Yep, the B&O railroad, the biggest railroad in the country at the time, the most important important railroad lines ran through there that could move supplies.
Yep, the B&O railroad, the biggest railroad in the country at the time, the most important.
By happenstance, West Virginia happens to track those rail lines.
All right, what's the name of the book?
Ceasing from Secession.
I just love these little bits of our history, David.
I do too. I mean, we could have a whole podcast, which would be fascinating to maybe only me,
about the way in which the fact that the Confederate states were in open rebellion
against the Union, and the Union did not want to recognize the Confederate states as a belligerent
power, because that would in many ways ratify the secession as a legal matter in an interesting way.
But at the same time, as for all practical purposes,
they were a belligerent power.
And so how did the union constantly shift between,
okay, as a practical matter,
we're treating them like a belligerent power,
but as a legal matter,
we're treating them as if they're just in open rebellion
in a state of treason.
It's really fascinating. It's a fascinating subtext history of the Civil War that involves the
Emancipation Proclamation, that involves the creation of West Virginia, that has relevance
to the ratification of the Civil War amendments. It's really the whole way the war was conducted with prisoners of war, et cetera.
It's really fascinating.
I mean, so somebody out there who's a legal scholar
who wants to write that book, you have one sale.
Two, I'll buy it too.
But Judge, I'm running and getting your book.
So I'm fascinated by this question.
All right, Judge Sargas, thank you.
Thanks so much.
Thank you, Judge.
Well, David, that was an incredible conversation.
Yeah, that was really great.
And I'm very glad that we talked about it
in a way that showed that, look,
because I think a lot of originalists tell themselves,
we're the only ones who care about text.
Everyone else is outcomes-based, we're text-based.
I think we've seen how originalism can become outcomes-based.
And I think I want listeners to know
how competing judicial philosophies are text-based.
And it's not as black and white as we often think,
especially when we're having these law school arguments,
like I engaged him constantly.
And there's ways, and Judge Newsom was right
when he talked about, he had this great speech
that we've talked about before,
how originalism can become living originalism.
And you can end up with outcomes
that when you go read the text,
you're like, how did this come from this text?
And so I do think that that's I
found that super helpful and a great way of shedding more light
than heat on the debate. So that was fun.
Well, I'm excited to continue the conversation. If you're in
the San Francisco area, May 22, at the Sydney Goldstein Theater,
I will be talking to Justice Breyer about his purpose based
traditional traditionalismism judicial philosophy.
And I'm told I was invited for the express purpose
of making a little spicier with Justice Breyer.
So I'm gonna try to bring Serrano level.
I love it.
I love it.
That's exciting.
All right.
A few more things.
One, MIT president Sally Kornbluth
was quoted this week as saying, we
can build an inclusive environment in many ways,
but compelled statements impinge on freedom of expression,
and they don't work.
MIT now becomes the first elite university
to ban diversity statements.
Harvard's Randall Kennedy, who David, you and I
have been on panels with Professor Kennedy,
and he's so interesting to talk to about the underlying purpose of DEI, how it's been actually
put into practice.
His quote was, it would be hard to overstate the degree to which many academics at Harvard
and beyond feel intense and growing resentment against the DEI enterprise because of features
that are perhaps most evident in the demand for DEI statements. So I
tweeted this out as thus endeth DEI. Now, yeah, and you said David, like, oh I want
to talk about this. So I want to be clear before you launch into me that, and I
think you knew this. No, no, I'm not launching into you. I don't mean that like, and now DEI has ended,
like it's over.
What I mean is this is the way DEI ends.
In the same way that 10 years later,
these schools were like,
oh, it turns out that getting rid of the SAT hurts
the very people we claimed we were helping.
And then when we said that anyone who opposed us getting
rid of the SAT was racist, we now take that all back.
We're sorry.
Similar to DEI statements, right?
When you talk about compelled speech,
they're like, well, this isn't compelled speech.
It's being against discrimination.
It's being for diversity.
Who's against diversity?
And all these people were saying, not only are you
this is unlawful. like you're violating the rights
of your faculty here, you're violating,
of course, academic freedom,
but also it's not going to work.
Making someone say something is not effectual in any way,
and it's been proven over and over again.
And in fact, in the DEI world,
in, for instance, employment trainings and stuff.
It's been shown to have the reverse effect, a mild but nevertheless counter effect to
the intended purpose.
So I think that what I'm saying is the end of DEI is these schools realizing that it
is both bad and not effective will mean the entire structure collapses very quickly in my view.
Yeah. I think when you have some historical perspective on these university disputes,
your tweet was entirely fair. And if Twitter existed 20 years ago, when the speech code
litigation effort was at sort of at its peak And you began to see schools repealing their own speech codes.
You could have tweeted out, thus endeth the speech code
because it's a tide turning moment, you know?
And so I would describe what's happening,
the battle for academic freedom as often a battle
between illiberal activists on the right, mainly coming at the university from
outside the university. So I think, for example, of how TPUSA has like a professor watch list,
right? And then they're trying to get their people to contact schools to attack professors
who've transgressed TPUSA's version of what free speech is. And so you have an illiberal right
that's often mainly outside the academy, and you have an illiberal right that's often mainly outside the academy,
and you have an illiberal left
that's very much inside the academy,
as we've seen from some of these protests, for example.
And that illiberal left inside the academy
is constantly trying new ways
to implement their version of justice
through illiberal means.
And so when you back down the speech code,
bias response teams rise up and they say,
well, it's not really a speech code.
We're just an educational opportunity to find you
when you engage in wrong speak and talk to you
about why all your wrong speak is wrong speak.
And then you back that down and the DEI stuff rises up.
Well, we're open to everyone,
but you just got to tell us what your worldview is
before we hire you.
And it's whack a mole.
No, you have to agree to our worldview before we hire you.
Yeah, you have to agree with our worldview.
We're actually not that curious about your worldview.
Yeah, we're not gonna tell you
that you have to agree with us,
but we're just gonna ask you to state your views
and then if we don't like them, you have no chance.
And each one of these moles that then if we don't like them, you have no chance.
And each one of these moles that comes up, you can whack them, but it takes a while.
And what the universities need to do, what the university administrators need to do is
realize we have an illiberal left in our midst and we can't constantly let them win until
we're sued out of it.
And this is what's happening on the university campuses.
They have let the illiberal left win constantly, and then they get sued and backlash out of
it.
And then what's next in 10 years, Sarah, five or 10 years, unless you start to draw these
lines like, say, for example, you do at University of Chicago or
Vanderbilt. But I think you're exactly right. The instant you know the tide is turning was
when an apex level university says no more, we're not doing this anymore. That's a sea change
moment. And that's absolutely why I wanted to talk about it. All right, next up, we have this opinion from the Fifth Circuit, and it's a unanimous opinion.
It's Judges Oldham, Engelhardt, and Jolly,
Judge Oldham writing, and I will say,
there are times when I find Judge Oldham's writing
is too sharp for the occasion.
Mm-hmm.
This is not one of those times.
So...
We need to arm wrestle for who gets to read
the first few paragraphs.
I get to. Because you're the host. Darn it. For those who worry that qualified immunity
can be invoked under absurd circumstances, buckle up. Austin Thomas Hughes is a good
Samaritan. After 2 30 a.m. Hughes called 911 to report a pickup truck swerving violently
across a four lane highway in Houston. 610 for those of my Houstonians
listening. While Hughes was on the phone with emergency dispatchers, the drunk driver crashed.
Still on the phone with 911, Hughes pulled behind the drunk driver and
effectuated a citizen's arrest in accordance with Texas law. But when police officers arrived at the
scene, they let the drunk driver go and then arrested Good Samaritan Hughes.
Parentheses, seriously.
Piling insanity on irrationality,
the officers then charged Hughes with a felony for impersonating a peace officer.
Hughes spent thousands of dollars defending against
the frivolous criminal charge before the city of Houston dropped them.
Then Hughes brought this 1983 suit against two officers who victimized him.
The district court denied qualified immunity.
We affirm. Obviously.
So that is the summary of the story, but actually the details of the story make it worse.
Oh, oh, can I do the next one?
Yes, please feel free because it's...
At about 3 a.m. on March 25, officers Fue and Garcia went to Hughes' home to arrest
him.
The record does not reveal and judicial imagination cannot fathom why officers needed or wanted
to execute this arrest warrant at 3 a.m.
But Hughes, who was asleep with his wife at the time,
answered the officers through the door.
Pugh and Garcia asked to see Hughes' Uber app,
insisted they needed to see his actual cell phone
rather than the screenshots he'd already sent.
Hughes cracked open the door
to give his cell phone to the officers.
However, instead of taking the phone,
the officers grabbed Mr. Hughes, outstretched arm,
pulled him out of his apartment, into the hallway, the officers grabbed Mr. Hughes' outstretched arm, pulled him out of his apartment
into the hallway and handcuffed him.
The record does not reveal, and again,
judicial imagination cannot fathom why officers needed
to trick an undressed Hughes into extending his arms
through the cracked door so he could be forcibly arrested
in his pajamas.
Fuon Garcia allowed Hughes's wife to clothe him
before taking him to the Harris County Joint Processing Center.
Man!
It's weird because also, in most of these types of stories,
there's a story of animus.
You sort of already know why the police officers
don't like the guy, and then they abuse their power
and their official status to, you know,
make life hard for this person
that they don't like. That doesn't exist in this story. It's particularly bewildering
because they show up on the scene after multiple 911 calls of Hughes following the drunk driver.
He's an Uber driver. He's got two people in his car. He is doing his job and clearly he
tells the two people, sorry, like this person this person's gonna kill someone we've got to follow him and make sure that everything ends up okay.
They can hear the Uber people in the back saying like yes he's super drunk he's swerving
this is oh my god you know all of that.
Yeah.
So when the police oh and then when the guy crashes his car the Uber driver pulls over
and like tries to get the guy and the guy starts running into the road and if you've
ever driven on 610 you are going to get killed they. And then the guy starts running into the road. And if you've ever driven on 610,
you are going to get killed.
They cannot, it's dark, they can't see you.
And so he, I mean, to say he's citizens arrested the guy,
no, he prevented the guy from killing himself.
Yeah.
He just didn't want him running into the road.
Okay, so then the police finally show up
and the drunk guy says,
I was at a flea market with Jesse and his friends.
Jesse said that we could go back to his place
and that he lived on I-59 South near downtown.
I told Jesse that I lived on I-10
and he said that he would take me home.
I said, okay, because I had been drinking
and had more than seven beers
and I was too drunk to drive.
But I had a friend at the bar that could have taken me home.
Jesse said, let's go to his house
and offered a drive, so we went.
Midway through the trip, I was not familiar with where I was at.
I started to ask Jesse where he was taking me.
I finally asked Jesse to just take me home, and that is when he got mad.
Jesse asked if I had something going on with his wife.
I told Jesse no.
Then Jesse asked me what was going on with his wife.
And I was confused, and I asked what he meant.
Jesse said, he knows there's something going on.
Jesse stopped my truck on the freeway and got out of it.
Okay, so the police believe this story,
even though this guy has now failed
all six drunk driving tests.
Gosh.
Hughes' name is not Jesse.
And of course he has his license
so he can prove his name isn't Jesse.
And also, let's break this down.
How did Jesse's car get there?
Right?
If this story is true, and they were both at a bar together, and he was like, I'll drive
your pickup truck for you.
How are there two cars at the scene?
It makes no sense.
But they believe the drunk driver, let him drive the rest of the way home by himself,
not arrested, and then arrest Hughes
a few days later at 3 a.m.
whose name again, I wanna repeat, is not Jesse.
So Sarah, I can't remember if I told this story
on AO earlier, this exact fact situation
almost happened to my son,
this exact fact situation almost happened to my son
that he drove his car to a party, parked it, a drunk driver who was super sloppy drunk,
piles into my son's parked car with such force
that it propels the parked car into the road,
totaling it by the way.
And then when the police come, he says, this guy hit me and he ran away.
And so when my son walks up to see the devastation
done to his vehicle, the police almost arrest him.
I mean, they, you know, hands in the air,
he's sitting by the squad car
and they're thinking that he is the,
he's a hit and run guy and they almost
let the obviously sloppily drunk underage person go but then finally decided to field
test him at which he failed immediately and the dynamic shifted. So these are much better
police they could see that the obviously drunk person was obviously drunk in the moment.
So the opinion continues qualified immunity protects all but the plainly incompetent or
those who knowingly violate the law.
Government officials are entitled to immunity from 1983 suits for damages arising from their
duties unless the plaintiff can show one, that the officer violated a federal statutory
or constitutional right, and two, that the unlawfulness of the conduct was clearly established
at the time.
The officer's basic contention is that even if they violated Hughes' constitutional right,
they are nonetheless shielded from liability by the fact that an independent intermediary,
namely the magistrate who approved their application for an arrest warrant, blessed their unconstitutional
conduct.
We first explain the interdependent intermediate doctrine and the Franks' exception to it. Then we B, apply that doctrine to few in Garcia's reckless and intentional misstatements and omissions in the warrant document.
And finally, we explain that the warrant affidavit could not have been established, sorry, could not have established probable cause without the offending misstatements and omissions.
I.E. your warrant doesn't cure your bad behavior if you lied to get the warrant. Duh.
Right. Right. Exactly. Exactly. It's just a tremendous opinion from start to finish. And
it's one of the times when quite sharp judicial language is abundantly justified. Just abundant.
But I do love the perins, like obviously.
Yeah, in some ways this isn't an interesting opinion,
except that it's qualified immunity.
And again, you're watching these courts struggle
with more and more situations
where common sense is just beggared, if you will.
And slowly but surely, David, this isn't happening, I
think, the way that either of us thought it would. But qualified immunity doctrine is
shifting. The Overton window of qualified immunity is shifting such that a situation
like this now falls way outside the Overton window of qualified immunity in a way that
perhaps even 20 years ago, they would have denied qualified immunity to these two guys.
But it would have been a far more serious hand-wringing exercise than the WTF, XOXO,
Judge Oldham opinion that we have here.
So I have a theory, Sarah.
I have a theory.
Qualified immunity has already been bitten by one of the walkers and the walking dead.
And it's in the zombification process.
Not a zombie yet.
Yes.
Well, this is why I'm waiting for the Trump immunity decision, because I think
that it will have impact on qualified immunity because what they're going to
have to create is a form of qualified immunity for presidents.
I think it's going to have an impact on it.
And I think I'm fascinated to have an impact on it. And I think I'm fascinated
to see how this decision goes. Because although I'm not nearly as alarmed as some observers were
about the argument, I had eyebrows going up. But I still think it's like, you know, in The Walking
Dead, when that bite first happened and you would see those little black marks like moving up the arm, that's our stage right now.
That's our stage.
I'm thinking more the last of us as the fungus,
you know, takes over and you see the fungus.
So they've inhaled the spores at this point?
Yeah.
Okay.
I think so.
All right, don't forget.
I should say the doctrine has inhaled the spores.
The doctrine has inhaled the spores. Well, I'm glad you clarified that.
Yes, thank you.
It's really important.
Our next episode, we are going to attend class, David.
You and I are going back to law school to attend a class that I need actually, which
is jurisdiction stripping from the Supreme Court in the Constitution taught by none other
than Judge Newsom of the 11th Circuit.
And I just want to warn you, Judge Newsom, I know very little about this subject.
Like, I'm coming in pretty blank slate here. I've got a lot of questions.
And I'll be the gunner in the front of the class. My hand will be up the whole time.
I have a question. That's me. Were you a gunner in law school, David?
No, intentionally no.
I literally sat because I had a, I had,
I had a lot to say, Sarah.
Uh-huh.
And I knew that if I vented, it gave,
if I let myself go, I would be one of those guys.
So I'd literally had a one every three classes
commenting policy. Internal commenting policy. Internal commenting policy.
Internal commenting policy.
One out of every three classes.
I'll sit in silence no matter how much it hurts me for two out of three.
But I did not want to be a gunner.
I realized that I couldn't both be a gunner and skip class as much as I wanted to.
Because then they'd know I was missing.
It would be very obvious.
So I had to pick which was more important to me,
voicing every thought in my head
or attending class only when I wanted to.
And I think you can guess which one I picked.
Napping is so important to really everything that I am.
No, I hear you, I hear you.
No, you do have to decide.
I mean, but for me it was an easy call
because I thought if I'm a gunner
as one of the only conservatives
in the whole freaking school,
I will have no friends by the end of this experience.
So, and I wanted friends.
There's a famous story from section two.
One of my friends from that section,
actually several of them remind me of the story
every few years. It was contracts class and our professor was kind of a lunatic. He wasn't really
teaching contracts and he would just rotate who got called on. There was just a list of the class
and he would just go through. I attended the class three times total for the whole semester. It is
also worth noting that I did get an A in contracts, which maybe shows you how
helpful the class was.
That's amazing.
But on one of the classes that I attended, because I did want to check in to make sure,
you know, is he going to talk about the final?
So one of the classes that I attended, I of course sat in the very back row, it was stadium
seating, and I'm, you know, on my laptop doing
who knows what, nothing related to contracts, I assure you of that. And all of a sudden,
I'm not listening, all of a sudden, he says, Miss Isker? And the class knows who I am,
because I'm in other classes with him that I do attend. You know, first year section,
you're in all your classes together. So the whole class turns around and looks at me.
And at that moment I have a choice.
And I make the choice to turn around and look behind me.
Did you really?
And he repeated the name a couple more times and moved on.
And no one ratted you.
Nobody ratted me out.
That is a section to stick with.
I think section four, 1991.
Section two.
Section two.
I would have been shanked in the yard like, no question.
That's hilarious.
It made sense in the moment.
I love that.
I loved Contracts Law.
I just liked reading the textbook.
And in fairness, like this makes me sound like I'm just so
freaking cool.
I'm too cool for that.
I actually have terrible auditory listening skills.
And so listening to a lecture while sitting,
like I can't listen to books on tape while sitting.
I have to be driving or doing something like to basically move one part of my brain
to focus, like the visual part of my brain to focus on something else in order to be
able to like listen. So when I'm driving, I can basically repeat back to you everything
the book on tape said. I can also tell you exactly where I was on the road for different
sentences.
But in class without that visual stimulus, it just doesn't work.
And so, like, to be very honest, I couldn't understand what was being said in class.
I like literally wasn't processing it.
So there, it was just a waste of my time.
I was better off spending the 90 minutes reading the book than sitting there and not being
able to really understand anything like process what was being said.
So before I just sound so cool.
No, that story, I can't even tell you how, that's gutsy.
That is gutsy.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Well, you know, like it,
cause it then looked like everyone else
was just also looking all the way back, not at me, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love that you're on the back row
and you looked behind you.
I looked out the door.
Maybe she was coming.
In fairness, which is where you normally were
was somewhere outside that door.
That's right.
Yeah.
All right, listeners, next up, Class of Judge Newsom.