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Sidney R. Finkel's avatar

Kudos to Mr. Unikowsky for his excellent and detailed proposal to correct the many issues with the Supreme Court by using a random process to select a single Justice who would author the controlling opinion in a case. But (why is there always a ‘but’ after a compliment) there are some good arguments against the proposal which ultimately render his proposal inappropriate.

1. There is his statement “All nine Justices are extremely intelligent people.” Oh God, that this were true. In Clarence Thomas we have a Justice who is by qualifications, temperament and intelligence uniquely unqualified for the Court. He sits on the Court only because of his prior political affiliation and the color of his skin. He has never authored a significant opinion, in part because it seems likely that every CJ has been told “Never give Clarence the opportunity to author a major opinion, he doesn’t have the slightest idea of what he is talking about.”

If Clarence had his way states would be able to imprison gay men and women for the sole reason that they were gay men and women. The Establishment Clause would only apply only to the federal government, state would be free to establish a state religion. Connecticut would be free to ban the sale of condoms. A person facing capital punishment whose innocence was proven would still be put to death if his lawyer failed to adequately represent him or meet arbitrary deadlines for various filings. Well you get the picture.

The post states “Supreme Court Roulette would make opinions different, but it wouldn’t make them worse.” Justice Thomas is living proof that is not the case.

2. As a retired quantitative method professor, I can tell you that a random procedure does not always produce what looks like a random outcome. Here is a random number sequence taken from a table of random number. 1688722228. That’s right, out of a run of 10 numbers, 8 are even and the number 2 appears consecutively for four times.

Want another example. Including the 1992 election there have been 8 presidential elections. The Democrats have won a plurality or majority in seven of these. Democrats have been President for 20 of the 32 years since 1992, Republicans 12. Dems 62.5%, Republicans 37.5% of that time span. The Dems have appointed 33.3% of the Justices.

Randomness is a bitch.

3. One argument that is used in the post is that at the District level and the Circuit level judicial decisions are made by one individual judge chosen randomly. This is not entirely correct. If a District judge makes an error, there is the Circuit judge who can make a correction. A Supreme Court decision is final unless Congress acts to overturn it, an extremely unlikely, probably impossible action in today’s partisan divided House and Senate.

If the Circuit judge makes an incorrect decision there are two remedies. The first is a hearing en banc which can overturn the decision, the second is an appeal to the Supreme Court. While both of these remedies are rare given the number of cases that go through the federal court system, they do exist and they do happen. This would not be the case with a single Justice rendering the opinion.

Finally, we have judge shopping and single judge Districts/Divisions. If there is a specific outcome one wishes and that one person is a conservative, well, I got a place in Texas just for you. No randomness filing there. Need the appropriate jurisdiction for your case, no problem.

4. There is a question of when should the selection of the single Justice be made. Make the selection after oral arguments and you have wasted the time of 8 of the 9 Justices.

Make it before oral arguments and 8 out of 9 Justices do not have to prepare or participate in oral arguments. The job of Supreme Court Justice is already a part time job. This change would make it a part time part time job.

5. One reason that the disparity in the Court vis-à-vis Republican vs. Democrats is that people do not play fairly. Two of the Justices appointed by President Trump were legal appointments that violated the unwritten rules and decorum of Supreme Court nominations. Where power is concerned we cannot trust anyone to not violate the rules when those rules are not absolute law.

So under the single opinion author, randomly selected system there may be nothing to prevent Justice A who feels very strongly about the issue from cutting a deal with Justice B who won the opinion lottery but does not care to write about the issue. Justice A could say I will trade you my next two opinions if you let me author this one. If this was prohibited by law the Justices would simply resort to clandestine procedures. There is no honor among thieves or ideologues of any ideology.

6. The Court, like the nation is bitterly divided along extremes. But a majority of Americans like the middle. We want equal opportunity, but without quota’s or excessive preferences. We want parental rights in education, but not have parents dictate school curriculums. We want abortion to be safe, legal and rare and we want the welfare of the mother to be protected, but not have late term abortion on demand. A Supreme Court which is constructed of extremists on both sides would further divide the nation if a single Justice controlled an opinion.

So when the post states that “We cannot expunge randomness from judicial outcomes. We can only manage it” that is not correct. In fact, we cannot manage randomness. That is the nature of randomness. When we try to manage randomness the outcome of that effort is almost always to make the situation worse. To paraphrase Churchill, the process of deciding Supreme Court issues by majority rule is terrible and awful, except compared to all the other methods.

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Michael's avatar

This is fascinating, the most intriguing court reform idea I have seen floated in recent memory. I hope you will follow up and address some critiques. I want to believe in this idea, but have some skepticism.

1. This seems to work really well at the level of the judgment, but maybe not at the level of reasoning and how far the decision goes? In Dobbs, there were 6 votes to uphold the law at issue and 3 to strike it down, so under your system the dissenters would have had a 33% chance of prevailing instead of 0%. But if I am Clarence Thomas, why don't I, instead of joining the Alito majority, simply concur in the judgment while writng an opinion that - like his Dobbs concurrence - sweeps more broadly and strikes down Obergefell, Lawrence, etc, figuring that such an opinion does not reduce the odds of reversing Roe but does give an 11% chance of getting everything I want even though 89% of the court does not agree?

2. It does seem like, on political cases, conservatives (because they have the majority now) might keep taking bites at the apple until they finally prevail.

3. Would this approach be strictly for merits opinions or also apply to emetgency motions?

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