Environmental Law and the Classical Legal Tradition

Ius & Iustitium welcomes submissions from academics, practicing lawyers, and students interested in the classical legal tradition. The following essay was submitted by Brian Quigley, Research and Reference Librarian at NSU Shepard Broad College of Law at Nova Southeastern University in Davie, Florida. This post is adapted from a longer article available here.


The classical legal tradition is ever-new. Its history is one of repeated displacement and revival. Stuart Banner identifies several persuasive reasons for the decline in the use of natural law reasoning that began in the late nineteenth century. These include a greater reliance on written constitutions, that law and religion were increasingly viewed as separate domains, a dramatic increase in the volume of legal publishing, and a feeling that the natural law lacked useful content.[1] In the face of these headwinds it is easy to imagine the classical legal tradition becoming a matter solely of historical, rather than practical, interest. Instead, the tradition has been subject to repeated revivals, first in the 1910s and early 1920s, and again—in more sustained fashion—in the 30s, 40s, and 50s as a response to the rise of totalitarianism and the horrors of the Second World War. While our legal culture has changed dramatically in the intervening decades, interest in the classical legal tradition has never fully receded and may be in the early stages of widespread resurgence.

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“Closure Rules” Are Ius for Originalists

Conor Casey is a Lecturer in Law, University of Liverpool School of Law & Social Justice. Adrian Vermeule is the Ralph Tyler Jr. Professor of Constitutional Law, Harvard Law School. 


A standard set of claims, common to both classical lawyers and Dworkinians, is that the interpretation of positive legal rules inevitably rests on express or implied arguments from political morality (in particular, for the classical lawyer, the subset of political morality bearing on legal justice), and that positive rules are inevitably under-determinate, due to the inherent limits of language and of lawmakers’ foresight. Originalists have evolved an attempt at a solution: “closure rules.”

At the question and answer session following a recent panel discussion, organized by the American Enterprise Institute, on “Natural Law and Original Meaning,” an audience member asked the panelists (Sherif Girgis, Kevin Walsh, and Lee Strang) if judges should be able to apply “maxims of natural law as canons of construction” to find the meaning of posited constitutional text, where texts remain under-determinate after attempts to ascertain its original meaning from socio-historical sources. Strang’s headline response was that there was no conventional originalist position to address the question (a notable response in itself). But Strang proceeded to note that originalists have worked hard to identify additional conceptual resources to create so-called “closure rules” in cases where constitutional text remains under-determinate, after the search for things like original semantic and conventional public meaning has been exhausted. Strang cited the possibility of seeking out originally understood legal rules of interpretation to try and generate thicker, more robust, original meanings and ameliorate the under-determinacy problem. Where this kind of enterprise still yielded under-determinacy, Strang suggested that originalists had argued powerfully that constitutional actors should proceed in a Thayerian fashion: the legislative branch should be permitted to “construct” meaning and judges should defer to their construction unless they have acted in clear error of other constitutional commitments.

As we have previously noted, however, such “closure rules” just replicate the problem they are intended to address. Closure rules are themselves subject to the same problems as the first-order rules for which they attempt to provide a tourniquet of determinacy. The very fact that Professor Strang mentioned multiple possibilities for “closure rules” underscores the point: the choice between possible closure rules itself depends upon normative arguments. It is not just written in the nature of things, inherent in the nature of language or communication or inherent in the nature of interpretation, that the interpreter should simply “put the statute down” (as Frank Easterbrook once suggested), should rely on party presentation of socio-historical facts rather than attempt their own search (as some originalists suggest), defer to legislators or agencies (the approach Strang finds powerful), or adopt some other approach. To adopt one or other approach itself requires a choice, necessarily based on arguments about which approach serves the public interest or common good — whether or not the interpreter makes those arguments explicit.

Likewise with the idea that originalists can just use the closure rules “used by the founding generation itself,” such as the above-mentioned use of conventional legal rules of interpretation present at the different times constitutional provisions were ratified. Apart from other grievous problems (notably, that the founding generation thought about law in an entirely different way, within a classical framework and based upon a classical legal ontology), such rules themselves come in multiple competing versions, are themselves inevitably partially indeterminate and require further, controversial specification, and themselves require interpretation, resting on normative arguments. Just as first-order rules can be read at multiple levels of generality, cashed out in different ways, and otherwise extrapolated in different directions, so too with the closure rules. Rules of historical evidence, for example, “rest on express or implied normative assumptions and arguments about the costs of decisionmaking and the costs of error, about the collateral and systemic effects of admitting or not admitting certain categories of evidence, and a myriad other topics” (as one of us recently noted). As H. Jefferson Powell put it, “Rather than avoiding the responsibility of choice, history requires of the originalist a whole new range of contestable…decisions.”

As another example, take Strang’s preferred example of “deference.” As administrative lawyers arguing over the best specification of Chevron deference can attest, merely saying “defer to reasonable interpretations of ambiguous text” is only the beginning of a very long story, involving threshold “step zero“ questions (when exactly does deference apply? Are there categories of decisions to which it doesn’t apply at all?), “step one” questions (how ambiguous is ambiguous?), and “step two” questions (how reasonable is reasonable?). At every such step, normative arguments have been and must be called into play. Consider the idea in the leading decision on the step zero problem, United States v. Mead, that a certain complex approach to step zero best serves “fairness and deliberation.” Consider also an argument for the “major questions” clear statement rule, recently advanced by Justice Neil Gorsuch, that it helps to prevent “government by the people” from being supplanted by “government by bureaucracy.” Gorsuch’s argument here can only be described as Dworkinian in method, although needless to say not Dworkinian in substance.

Sometimes, “closure rules” are said to lie within the “construction zone,” where “construction” is taken to be a different activity than “interpretation.” As we have also said before, this is in essence an arbitrary semantic categorization, one that presupposes a conception of “interpretation” that the classical lawyer contests. Actual interpreters do not approach or experience their task as though it involves a switch between an “interpretation” phase and a “construction” phase where “the law runs out.” It is all one process, a process that occurs within law and within legal interpretation, involving — from the classical perspective — the harmonization of two types of law: the harmonization of positive texts (lex) with background principles of legal justice (ius), not as a way of overriding lex, but as a way of understanding and interpreting lex in light of the larger commitments of the legal order.

As John Finnis puts it, basic principles of natural law are not extra-legal considerations or policy arguments brought to bear by lawyers and judge where the law runs out, but themselves function as a “direct source of law (or justification for judicial decision) and, in a certain sense, as already law.” Basic precepts of the natural law, says Finnis, are best regarded as “judicially applicable moral rules and principles” and “ipso iure (i.e., precisely as morally and judicially applicable) rules of law” belonging to the “ius gentium portion of our law.”

The best account of “closure rules,” then, is that they are just another set of arguments about the content of ius, as opposed to lex. Closure rules are just ius for originalists. Here as elsewhere, whatever their abstract theories, interpreters inevitably practice the classical legal approach, even without knowing it.

In the end, Strang’s response nicely highlights a serious fault line between the interpretive approach of the classical legal tradition, on the one hand, and the hybrid approach of so-called natural law originalism on the other. In the resolution of hard cases, both types of jurists will inevitably appeal to considerations of ius – whether they call it that or not. The former approach builds into the structure of the theory regard for the basic precepts of natural law and legal justice as the interpretive lodestar. But the latter appears (from what we have observed) reluctant to invoke them or, at most, will only have recourse to them when they are incorporated by posited law sources, all out of concern for undermining law’s stability, or co-ordination function, or other institutional goods — goods that, in our view, have already been left by the wayside in the class of cases that require recourse to “closure rules.” While both theories may share some fundamentals, this is a wide divergence indeed.

Conor Casey & Adrian Vermeule

Some Reflections for Law Students

You’ve decided to go to law school. You have probably acted against the advice of family, friends, acquaintances, strangers, teachers, clergy, and, above all, lawyers. But as my late mother said to me often: some people have to learn things the hard way. I will not dwell on the decision to go to law school. But if you are reading Ius & Iustitium, you either are doing oppo research for your Conservatism Inc. job or you have an interest in the classical legal tradition. As many students are beginning law school this month, I thought I would offer some reflections for your edification.

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The Enigma of Bolling v. Sharpe

Ius & Iustitium welcomes submissions from academics, practicing lawyers, and students interested in the classical legal tradition. The following essay was submitted by Cass R. Sunstein, the Robert Walmsley University Professor at Harvard University.


Cass R. Sunstein*

Abstract

In Bolling v. Sharpe, the Supreme Court struck down a federal statute segregating the schools in the District of Columbia. The Equal Protection Clause is inapplicable to the national government, and the Court relied on the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Bolling v. Sharpe has been followed by many cases that find an “equal protection component” to the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment (“reverse incorporation”). These cases are impossible to defend on originalist grounds, and they are exceptionally challenging to defend on textualist grounds. They are best understood as an embodiment of “living constitutionalism” or some related approach (potentially including common good constitutionalism). Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Center, overruling Roe v. Wade, adopts an interpretation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, rooted in a combination of text, originalism, and tradition, that generally sets itself against living constitutionalism or related approaches, and that is incompatible with the approach in Bolling and successor cases. Under the approach in Dobbs, discrimination on the basis of race and sex, or on any other ground, should be subject to rational basis review (at most) – and should frequently be upheld. If this is an unacceptable conclusion, it is a strong point for Bolling and against the approach in Dobbs, at least under one view about how to choose a theory of constitutional interpretation.

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Law Is Upstream of Morality, Exhibit 473

Ius & Iustitium welcomes submissions from academics, practicing lawyers, and students interested in the classical legal tradition. The following note was submitted by a practicing attorney, who wishes to remain anonymous.


An article published recently by Slate should add yet more evidence that law and morality are intertwined in the popular mind, that what is legal or illegal impacts what people believe is moral or immoral. The article takes the form of an extended comment, edited for length and clarity, by the director of an abortion clinic in Granite City, Illinois, across the river from St. Louis. The Granite City clinic has seen a substantial increase in out-of-state women seeking abortions since the Dobbs ruling and subsequent enforcement of restrictive laws and bans in nearby states such as Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Indiana. Slate has been conducting occasional interviews with the director about changes they have seen since Dobbs. Here are a few excerpts from that article:

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The Bourbons of Jurisprudence

Profs. William Baude and Stephen Sachs have published a review of Adrian Vermeule’s new book, Common Good Constitutionalism.  Ius & Iustitium is pleased to publish Vermeule’s response as a coda to our symposium on this work.

The Editors


Adrian Vermeule[1]

In a recent and illuminating paper,[2] Emad Atiq (a legal philosopher) and Jud Mathews diagnosed what they called a “jurisprudential turn” in public law scholarship, and argued that this turn amounted to a poorly theorized attempt to rule in certain approaches to public law theory, and rule out other approaches, on highly contestable grounds, by a kind of unwarranted conceptual fiat. One of the central examples Atiq and Mathews used to illustrate this critique is the work of William Baude and Stephen Sachs.[3] Baude and Sachs confidently imagine that their particular, highly idiosyncratic versions of positivism and originalism provide the yardstick against which all public law theories should be measured. They present as unquestioned axioms of legality and legal interpretation in our legal order what are, in fact, highly controversial views, which do not correspond to or derive from any recognized version of positivism in jurisprudence. As Atiq and Mathews put it, “[Baude and Sachs] argue that an originalist approach to constitutional interpretation is a requirement of law, and that this fact follows from the correct first principles about law—roughly, the positivistic claims of H.L.A. Hart. In fact, it takes work to clarify the controversial variation on Hart’s theory that underwrites their defense of originalism. … Baude and Sachs’ originalist conclusions do not follow from standard versions of positivism defended by Hart, Raz, and Shapiro.”[4] Continue reading “The Bourbons of Jurisprudence”

The Theory and Practice of Common Good Constitutionalism

Ius & Iustitium is pleased to present Adrian Vermeule’s response to the contributions in the symposium on his recent book, Common Good Constitutionalism. A general introduction to the symposium (including links to the contributions) may be found here. Vermeule is the Ralph S. Tyler Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard Law School.


My heartfelt thanks to the editors of Ius & Iustitium for organizing this illuminating symposium on Common Good Constitutionalism (CGC). The contributions of the participants uniformly comprehended the thrust and aims of the book, and generally added valuable explication or elaboration of its ideas. Taken as a group, the participants have, for the most part, sketched a healthy conception of the relationship between the venerable theory of classical lawyering and its practice under current circumstances. My remarks will center on that relationship.

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Common Good Constitutionalism for the Working Lawyer

This is the fifth piece Ius & Iustitium is presenting in its symposium on Adrian Vermeule’s new book Common Good Constitutionalism. A general introduction to the symposium may be found here. Jacob Neu is a partner at Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP.


When law students ask me what my favorite law school class was, they often assume it was something doctrinal or practical related to my work as a patent attorney or the broader discipline of intellectual property. So my usual answer, that I thoroughly enjoyed a class on American Legal History discussing the period from 1860-1940, often takes them by surprise.  Part of this is just my hobbyist’s interest–I double majored in history alongside mechanical engineering. But the other part is that the social, historical, and legal context provided by a legal history course has helped shape how I think through the application of the law in many contexts over my eleven years of practice. I will never explicitly cite a case or legal theory discussed in that class, but knowing how the law evolved and what the competing interests and theories are does shine a light on how to craft a contract clause or structure a legal argument.

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The Tapestry of Common Good Constitutionalism

This is the fourth piece Ius & Iustitium is presenting in its symposium on Adrian Vermeule’s new book Common Good Constitutionalism. A general introduction to the symposium may be found here. Masurius Sabinus is a recent graduate of Harvard Law School.


Every spring, the Harvard Law Review rents out the Harvard Club of Boston for its annual black-tie banquet. Student-editors, alumni, and professors all throng to the Gilded-Age neoclassical ballroom in Back Bay, there to drink and dine between blazing fireplaces—and beneath the Harvard-themed tapestries that bedeck the walls. Like a tapestry decorating the halls of legal scholarship, Common Good Constitutionalism combines various intellectual strands in service of a coherent picture of the law. I aim to isolate the main strands Professor Adrian Vermeule weaves together, and to explain the purpose each thread serves in the overall work. I also highlight some strands that have received too little attention, and discuss one strand that Vermeule might have threaded more fulsomely.

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The price of victory in Kansas

Yesterday, Kansas voters rejected decisively an amendment to the Kansas Constitution that would have clarified that the Kansas Constitution does not protect a right to abortion. This defeat represents a major victory for the conservative legal movement. The Kansas Supreme Court, in Hodes & Nauser v. Schmidt, 309 Kan. 610, 440 P.3d 461 (2019), found that the right to an abortion was protected by provisions in the Kansas Constitution. In response, the legislature proposed a constitutional amendment that would effectively nullify the Hodes & Nauser decision. That amendment was submitted to the voters. Following an acrimonious campaign, it was defeated. The process worked, just as leading conservative legal thinkers told us it would, even if many are deeply disappointed by the result in concrete terms.

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