Friday, October 28, 2005
On the haunting of No. 13 West Range
Friday's Cavalier Daily reprints this story from the CD in 1942 about the spooks in the old Poe Room.
The Libby indictment seems to be simple enough
Well, I read the Libby indictment. It says he lied about to the FBI and the grand jury about his conversations with Tim Russert, Matthew Cooper, and Judith Miller, when he told the FBI and the grand jury that he heard about Ms. Plame's undercover status from reporters. Instead, Libby heard about it from people in the Vice-President's office, where Libby was Chief of Staff. I suppose Cheney, Russert, Cooper, and Miller are necessary witnesses for the prosecution.
I'm guessing that the indictment does not live up to the advance hype - the Bush haters and muckrakers will be disappointed.
I'm guessing that the indictment does not live up to the advance hype - the Bush haters and muckrakers will be disappointed.
Thursday, October 27, 2005
What might have done in Judge Karen Williams in the last go round
John Fund wrote here: "One federal judge was nixed by a powerful senator over a judicial opinion that would have been attacked by feminists."
Some commenters thought this reference might be to Judge Williams' opinion in the Ocheltree panel decision - the en banc court upheld the liability verdict but reversed on punitive damages. Others thought it might be Judge Edith Jones' concurring opinion in the McCorvey case.
I suspect, notwithstanding the NY Times article focusing on Ocheltree, that Mr. Fund's reference is to the McCorvey case.
Some commenters thought this reference might be to Judge Williams' opinion in the Ocheltree panel decision - the en banc court upheld the liability verdict but reversed on punitive damages. Others thought it might be Judge Edith Jones' concurring opinion in the McCorvey case.
I suspect, notwithstanding the NY Times article focusing on Ocheltree, that Mr. Fund's reference is to the McCorvey case.
Senator Warner on Miers' withdrawal
Here the AP quotes Senator John Warner of Virginia as saying regarding the withdrawal of the nomination of Harriet Miers to the U.S. Supreme Court: "In effect, she was denied due process by members of her own party."
Perhaps the senators like Warner who thought that Miers was a fine choice will give the rest some trouble over her replacement as the nominee.
The article also quotes the former majority leader from Mississippi, Sen. Lott, as saying: "In a month, who will remember the name Harriet Miers?"
Perhaps the senators like Warner who thought that Miers was a fine choice will give the rest some trouble over her replacement as the nominee.
The article also quotes the former majority leader from Mississippi, Sen. Lott, as saying: "In a month, who will remember the name Harriet Miers?"
NRC gives notice of intent to terminate the license for U.Va.'s nuclear reactor
Here is the notice from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission of the termination of the operating license for the nuclear reactor facility that was located at the University of Virginia.
If I understand it correctly, it says the reactor was first operated in 1960 and shut down in 1998.
I wondered when I saw the recent ABC News story about loose security at college nuclear facilities whether there was still an operating nuclear reactor at U.Va.
If I understand it correctly, it says the reactor was first operated in 1960 and shut down in 1998.
I wondered when I saw the recent ABC News story about loose security at college nuclear facilities whether there was still an operating nuclear reactor at U.Va.
What kinds of civil litigation gets reported in the Roanoke paper
Exhibit A - This story titled Lively legal fight breaks out over Salem cemetery, about competing boards of directors of a cemetery with a lot of money.
Exhibit B - This story titled Lawsuit filed over stadium expansion, about the first suit filed by a sub-contractor claiming it was not paid for work done on the behind-schedule expansion of the Virginia Tech football stadium that messed up everyone's season ticket seating.
Exhibit B - This story titled Lawsuit filed over stadium expansion, about the first suit filed by a sub-contractor claiming it was not paid for work done on the behind-schedule expansion of the Virginia Tech football stadium that messed up everyone's season ticket seating.
Motion to dismiss granted in wrongful discharge case
In Lucker v. Cole Vision Corp., Judge Turk explained in analyzing the plaintiff's Virginia law wrongful discharge claim that (1) the plaintiff must show either that the employer "violated a statutorily created right by firing him" or the plaintiff "had a statutorily imposed duty which he was fired for refusing to violate," and (2) "either that he was clearly within the public group directly entitled to statutory protection" or that the employer "fired him in retaliation because he refused to engage in a criminal act."
The Court concluded that the plaintiff had no claim based on the Virginia Consumer Protection Act.
The Court concluded that the plaintiff had no claim based on the Virginia Consumer Protection Act.
On cross-examination
The other day, I was cross-examining a woman regarding her testimony about what she saw out the window of her trailer.
I asked something like, "Was your trailer at a right angle to the other trailer?"
From behing me, I heard the other party murmur to her lawyer, speaking of the witness, "She doesn't know what a right angle is."
Ouch, I thought.
I asked something like, "Was your trailer at a right angle to the other trailer?"
From behing me, I heard the other party murmur to her lawyer, speaking of the witness, "She doesn't know what a right angle is."
Ouch, I thought.
The last Harriet Miers post
In the manner predicted by various bloggers and pundits, Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers asked President Bush to withdraw her nomination, citing the problem of Senate demands for her papers as White House counsel. Of course, this problem didn't sneak up on her or anyone, particularly since the quest for documents (typically by Senate Democrats) has become the main tactic of opposition to nominations.
The best thing I read about the reaction to the Miers nomination is that it, like the response to the selection of former Vice-President Quayle, shows that standards are higher than they used to be. Sure, history tells us that many popular Supreme Court justices were not appeals court judges or law professors or Supreme Court advocates before their appointment. In the present day, however, there are literally more lawyers and more judges than ever before. The talent pool is deeper than ever before.
The best thing I read about the reaction to the Miers nomination is that it, like the response to the selection of former Vice-President Quayle, shows that standards are higher than they used to be. Sure, history tells us that many popular Supreme Court justices were not appeals court judges or law professors or Supreme Court advocates before their appointment. In the present day, however, there are literally more lawyers and more judges than ever before. The talent pool is deeper than ever before.
Wednesday, October 26, 2005
Why your dog watches lots of TV and eats Doritos
CSM has this report titled Why your dog is smarter than a wolf about how dogs have mastered the study and imitation of humans.
On failure to provide timely expert witness disclosures
In Saudi v. Northrop Grumman Corp., Judge Wilkinson wrote:
"Rule 37(c)(1) provides that '[a] party that without substantial justification fails to disclose information required by Rule 26(a) . . . is not, unless such failure is harmless, permitted to use as evidence at trial . . . any witness or information not so disclosed.' A district court may also impose 'other appropriate sanctions.' Id. Rule 26 disclosures are often the centerpiece of discovery in litigation that uses expert witnesses. A party that fails to provide these disclosures unfairly inhibits its opponent’s ability to properly prepare, unnecessarily prolongs litigation, and undermines the district court’s management of the case. For this reason, '[w]e give particularly wide latitude to the district court’s discretion to issue sanctions under Rule 37(c)(1).' S. States Rack & Fixture, 318 F.3d at 595 (internal quotation marks omitted)."
"Rule 37(c)(1) provides that '[a] party that without substantial justification fails to disclose information required by Rule 26(a) . . . is not, unless such failure is harmless, permitted to use as evidence at trial . . . any witness or information not so disclosed.' A district court may also impose 'other appropriate sanctions.' Id. Rule 26 disclosures are often the centerpiece of discovery in litigation that uses expert witnesses. A party that fails to provide these disclosures unfairly inhibits its opponent’s ability to properly prepare, unnecessarily prolongs litigation, and undermines the district court’s management of the case. For this reason, '[w]e give particularly wide latitude to the district court’s discretion to issue sanctions under Rule 37(c)(1).' S. States Rack & Fixture, 318 F.3d at 595 (internal quotation marks omitted)."
Tuesday, October 25, 2005
Wellington Mara right up there with Harriet Miers
Here the New York Times quotes Frank Gifford, who said of the late Wellington Mara: "For all the years I've known him, and they number more than 40, I've never heard him utter a swear word."
On Saturday, I posted the following:
Here Secretary of Education Margaret Spelling says of Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers: "I don't think I have ever heard her say a cuss word in the entire time I have known her."
On Saturday, I posted the following:
Here Secretary of Education Margaret Spelling says of Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers: "I don't think I have ever heard her say a cuss word in the entire time I have known her."
Why they're ordering new spittoons for the White House
Here it is revealed that the secret of Senator George Allen's success is his smokeless tobacco technique.
Why Justice Miers will cancel the Supreme Court's account with Lexis
In this cheeky press release, LexisNexis says more or less that it looks like Harriet Miers might not be the next justice, and they are offering a scoreboard on the number of cases/opinions/stuff on Lexis for various possible candidates to succeed Justice O'Connor:
Harrier Miers, 16
Alice Batchelder, 800+
J. Michael Luttig, 420+
J. Harvie Wilkinson, 720+
Priscilla Owen, 135
Samuel Alito, Jr., 960
Michael McConnell, 230
Larry Thompson, 70
Maura Corrigan, 360
Alberto Gonzales, 800+
Harrier Miers, 16
Alice Batchelder, 800+
J. Michael Luttig, 420+
J. Harvie Wilkinson, 720+
Priscilla Owen, 135
Samuel Alito, Jr., 960
Michael McConnell, 230
Larry Thompson, 70
Maura Corrigan, 360
Alberto Gonzales, 800+
What happens if the witness takes the stand and swears he is Napoleon
Years ago, at a hearing before Judge Thomas F. Hogan in the District of Columbia, I heard him ask something like whether on a motion for summary judgment, if the non-moving party swears that he is Napoleon, if the Court has to accept that evidence as true.
This opinion from the Second Circuit suggests that the answer is no, at least not when "“[n]o reasonable person would undertake the suspension of disbelief necessary to give credit to the allegations made in [the] complaint."
This opinion from the Second Circuit suggests that the answer is no, at least not when "“[n]o reasonable person would undertake the suspension of disbelief necessary to give credit to the allegations made in [the] complaint."
On which or that
Ray has this post on an explanation by Judge Traxler, when he was a district court judge, on the different meanings of "which" and "that," in the case of Rhodes v. County of Darlington, South Carolina, 833 F. Supp. 1163, 1191 n.18 (D.S.C. 1992).
ABA can't win on Harriet Miers evaluation?
This article from law.com suggests: "For the ABA's effort to overcome the allegations of bias in its ratings, the Miers assessment may be a lose-lose situation. If Miers is rated well qualified, the bar group will be derided by those conservative stalwarts, such as columnist George F. Will, who have declared her unqualified and an embarrassment. If she is rated not qualified or less-than-unanimously qualified, the wrath will come from the White House, which disassociated itself four years ago from the prescreening relationship with the ABA that had been in place for decades."
It goes on to suggest the possibility of another form of cronyism, quoting one source who said: "Miers has had a lot of involvement in the ABA and there may be feelings of loyalty." Another source said that if Miers gets the same rating as constitutional law practitioners John Roberts and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, then the ratings don't mean much: "For the ABA to give [Harriet Miers] a 'well qualified' rating would really dilute the effectiveness of these ratings, not just to conservatives but to moderates as well."
It goes on to suggest the possibility of another form of cronyism, quoting one source who said: "Miers has had a lot of involvement in the ABA and there may be feelings of loyalty." Another source said that if Miers gets the same rating as constitutional law practitioners John Roberts and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, then the ratings don't mean much: "For the ABA to give [Harriet Miers] a 'well qualified' rating would really dilute the effectiveness of these ratings, not just to conservatives but to moderates as well."
Monday, October 24, 2005
Miers' nomination hits the red line
This report quotes President Bush as saying, by way of explanation about why he will not release the Harriet Miers papers from her work as White House counsel, "That would breach very important confidentiality, and it's a red line I'm not willing to cross."
He's not willing to cross the red line? Ordinarily, I would assume that means something about ice hockey or the D.C. Metro, I'm not sure which. (At Metro Center, I think you can walk under the Red Line.)
He's not willing to cross the red line? Ordinarily, I would assume that means something about ice hockey or the D.C. Metro, I'm not sure which. (At Metro Center, I think you can walk under the Red Line.)
Sunday, October 23, 2005
The Commission on Courts in the 21st Century
This press release announces the formation of the Commission on Courts in the 21st Century, to forecast the needs of Virginia courts 10-15 years into the future.
When is a publicly-owned road not a highway under Virginia law
In U.S. v. Adams, Judge Luttig of the Fourth Circuit followed up on his earlier opinion in U.S. v. Smith, concluding once again that driving on federal property not open to the public is not subject to the rules of the road for Virginia's highways.
What these opinions don't say, I suppose, is that even if you could not be driving illegally, you could be guilty of criminal trespass, either on the CIA access road or the Jericho Ditch Lane in the Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge.
What these opinions don't say, I suppose, is that even if you could not be driving illegally, you could be guilty of criminal trespass, either on the CIA access road or the Jericho Ditch Lane in the Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge.
Class certification denied in hostile work environment claim against Roanoke City sheriff
In King v. McMillan, Judge Wilson refused to certify a class action for claims of sexual harassment brought against the Sheriff for the City of Roanoke, concluding that the motion for class certification was untimely and failed to meet the required elements of numerosity and commonality.
Prison Litigation Reform Act does not apply to action brought by administrator of deceased inmate's estate
Denying the defendants' motions to dismiss in Simmons v. Johnson, Judge Conrad held, among other things, that the Prison Litigation Reform Act did not apply to the plaintiff's claims as the administrator of the estate of an inmate who committed suicide in prison.
The Condoleezza Rice coin toss
Here is a picture of the Secretary of State tossing the coin at the Tennessee-Alabama game.
I wrote the other day that the White House needed to put out some football stories about Harriet Miers, but this was not the kind of thing I had in mind at all.
I wrote the other day that the White House needed to put out some football stories about Harriet Miers, but this was not the kind of thing I had in mind at all.
On Miers and money
Atrios is more disturbed on items 3 and 4 on this list of money delinquencies attributed to Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers.
I would have thought that items 1 and 2, related to the suspensions of her law license for failure to pay dues, were more important, at least before Judge Thomas Griffith was confirmed to the D.C. Circuit, having not paid for three years.
I would have thought that items 1 and 2, related to the suspensions of her law license for failure to pay dues, were more important, at least before Judge Thomas Griffith was confirmed to the D.C. Circuit, having not paid for three years.
Saturday, October 22, 2005
You didn't hear it here first
Here Secretary of Education Margaret Spelling says of Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers: "I don't think I have ever heard her say a cuss word in the entire time I have known her."
For some reason, this comment causes me to recollect the character Nate Caudill's observation in Harry Turtledove's The Guns of the South that "sometimes nothing felt better than a ripe, round oath." I'm not sure that I understand precisely what is a "ripe, round oath" but I have observed that something of the kind appears to have a therapeutic effect for some people.
For some reason, this comment causes me to recollect the character Nate Caudill's observation in Harry Turtledove's The Guns of the South that "sometimes nothing felt better than a ripe, round oath." I'm not sure that I understand precisely what is a "ripe, round oath" but I have observed that something of the kind appears to have a therapeutic effect for some people.
Virginia Cavaliers with five points outscore Tennessee Vols
Unfortunately, Virginia lost 7-5 to North Carolina, while UT lost 6-3 to Alabama.
Ruminations on the Harriet Miers nomination
Leftcoaster posts here on the signs that the White House might be plotting a way out of the Harrier Miers nomination, citing among other things this Washington Times story, titled Insiders see hint of Miers pullout. CQ has this post describing another kind of out for the Bush Administration, which seems plausible enough - the White House can say that it will not waive the privilege covering Ms. Miers' work papers as White House counsel, and the Senate will say then she cannot be approved.
Truth Laid Bear has this list of bloggers for and against the nomination.
Baseball Crank has a lengthy and thoughtful post about why he is opposed to the Miers nomination.
The latest George Will column, titled Defending The Indefensible, has been cited in many places. Will begins: "Such is the perfect perversity of the nomination of Harriet Miers that it discredits, and even degrades, all who toil at justifying it." She might get confirmed, however, because "it is surpassingly difficult to get a majority anywhere to rise in defense of mere excellence."
Patterico has tracked down the passage from The Brethren that comes to mind whenever I hear comparisons between Harriet Miers and Virginia's own Lewis Powell, Jr. (“Bill Douglas, now, he knows what is in those books,” Powell said. “I don’t.”) I think of Powell as a great man, the ideal of the lawyer-citizen from Virginia, but not so great as a justice of the Supreme Court. I don't think he ever thought of himself as a great justice and was reluctant to take the job in the first place. The circumstances of his appointment were much different: Powell accepted the nomination after Judges Carwell and Haynsworth had been rejected by the Senate, and as a former American Bar Association president, his selection neutralized opposition from the ABA. The Bush administration was on a roll with the selection of Chief Justice Roberts and has never given a flying Fig Newton about the ABA, which may yet opine that Harriet Miers is not qualified (or less than "well qualified"). What the ABA committee will say about Miers is "[o]ne of the more interesting questions." For all these reasons, I don't see much likeness between the nomination of Justice Powell and the Miers nomination, except in the sense that Miers seems no more likely to be comfortable (or predictable) while learning on the job than was Powell.
Truth Laid Bear has this list of bloggers for and against the nomination.
Baseball Crank has a lengthy and thoughtful post about why he is opposed to the Miers nomination.
The latest George Will column, titled Defending The Indefensible, has been cited in many places. Will begins: "Such is the perfect perversity of the nomination of Harriet Miers that it discredits, and even degrades, all who toil at justifying it." She might get confirmed, however, because "it is surpassingly difficult to get a majority anywhere to rise in defense of mere excellence."
Patterico has tracked down the passage from The Brethren that comes to mind whenever I hear comparisons between Harriet Miers and Virginia's own Lewis Powell, Jr. (“Bill Douglas, now, he knows what is in those books,” Powell said. “I don’t.”) I think of Powell as a great man, the ideal of the lawyer-citizen from Virginia, but not so great as a justice of the Supreme Court. I don't think he ever thought of himself as a great justice and was reluctant to take the job in the first place. The circumstances of his appointment were much different: Powell accepted the nomination after Judges Carwell and Haynsworth had been rejected by the Senate, and as a former American Bar Association president, his selection neutralized opposition from the ABA. The Bush administration was on a roll with the selection of Chief Justice Roberts and has never given a flying Fig Newton about the ABA, which may yet opine that Harriet Miers is not qualified (or less than "well qualified"). What the ABA committee will say about Miers is "[o]ne of the more interesting questions." For all these reasons, I don't see much likeness between the nomination of Justice Powell and the Miers nomination, except in the sense that Miers seems no more likely to be comfortable (or predictable) while learning on the job than was Powell.
Friday, October 21, 2005
What do Professor Bainbridge and the Roanoke paper have in common?
The professor might agree in part with the editorial from the Roanoke Times that says here: "Bush should be ashamed and embarrassed to have nominated a candidate with so little merit as a U.S. Supreme Court justice."
On judicial restraint
A state court trial judge writes here in the New York Times: "A week doesn't go by when I am not forced by the law to do something that I would rather not do if I were, say, a philosopher-king unencumbered by the legislation of mere mortals."
He concludes: "We need more judges, at all levels, who are not frustrated policymakers, who won't strain to find ambiguity in unambiguous words because they want to 'do good,' and who won't hesitate to go where their own principled application of the law takes them, even if (and especially if) it is a result they would not freely choose."
He concludes: "We need more judges, at all levels, who are not frustrated policymakers, who won't strain to find ambiguity in unambiguous words because they want to 'do good,' and who won't hesitate to go where their own principled application of the law takes them, even if (and especially if) it is a result they would not freely choose."
Thursday, October 20, 2005
New board member of Domino's - Diana Cantor
This press release says that the wife of Virginia Congressman Eric Cantor has been named a director of the board of Domino's Pizza, Inc.
What do you suppose they eat at those board meetings? Can I volunteer? I eat Domino's Pizza about once every two weeks.
The press release notes that Domino's is the Official Pizza of NASCAR.
Rep. Cantor was at William & Mary during part of my law school days, but I don't know what he ate while he was there.
What do you suppose they eat at those board meetings? Can I volunteer? I eat Domino's Pizza about once every two weeks.
The press release notes that Domino's is the Official Pizza of NASCAR.
Rep. Cantor was at William & Mary during part of my law school days, but I don't know what he ate while he was there.
Still more on the Harriet Miers questionnaire
This post, among other things, shows the startling contrast between the questionnaire answers of Harriet Miers and those of John Roberts on the question of judicial activism.
Wednesday, October 19, 2005
What can a judicial nominee learn from a deposed tyrant
Wonkette thinks this picture of Saddam Hussein with some notes written on the palm of his hand might give Harrier Miers an idea as she prepares for her confirmation hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Detail is on demonkey - Bainbridge et al. look at the Harriet Miers written answers
In this Bainbridge post, he cites the list of alleged errors in the written answers prepared by Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers for presentation to the Senate Judiciary committee.
He cites one fellow who wrote: "Where are the passages that show a bright, analytical mind — or failing that, a basic competence in placing commas?"
He concludes by agreeing with someone else who wrote: "everyone makes typos/spelling errors. However, most of us catch them before we hand them to the Senate in our application for one of the most powerful positions in the country, which is the most powerful in the world."
He cites one fellow who wrote: "Where are the passages that show a bright, analytical mind — or failing that, a basic competence in placing commas?"
He concludes by agreeing with someone else who wrote: "everyone makes typos/spelling errors. However, most of us catch them before we hand them to the Senate in our application for one of the most powerful positions in the country, which is the most powerful in the world."
Bad plan No. 5
In this post, Amy Ridenour takes on the White House's latest bad move in bashing the Republicans who think the nomination of Harriet Miers was a bad idea.
The post begins: "Adding to the sexism, elitism, faith, and threat cards in the White House arsenal, comes the 'far right' card."
It describes the appearance of a White House surrogate on the Tucker Carlson show (as seen by hundreds of people on cable), where the guy Blakeman dismissed the opponents of the nomination as characters from the "far right."
The post begins: "Adding to the sexism, elitism, faith, and threat cards in the White House arsenal, comes the 'far right' card."
It describes the appearance of a White House surrogate on the Tucker Carlson show (as seen by hundreds of people on cable), where the guy Blakeman dismissed the opponents of the nomination as characters from the "far right."
Tuesday, October 18, 2005
Fourth Circuit denies rehearing in Hatfill v. NY Times defamation case
In Hatfill v. New York Times, the Fourth Circuit denied rehearing en banc by a vote of 6-6, over the dissent of Judge Wilkinson, who thinks that the panel decision fails to pass muster under the First Amendment.
As I wrote in this post about the panel decision, state law pleading standards would be much more demanding, and come closer (perhaps by accident) to providing the First Amendment protection Judge Wilkinson advocates.
As I wrote in this post about the panel decision, state law pleading standards would be much more demanding, and come closer (perhaps by accident) to providing the First Amendment protection Judge Wilkinson advocates.
The Harriet Miers written answers
Here, via the National Review, is the written collection of Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers' answers to some written questions from the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The parts that I liked were the summaries of her civil cases. There's no doubt that she has had an interesting and lively legal career.
The parts that I liked were the summaries of her civil cases. There's no doubt that she has had an interesting and lively legal career.
Third Saturday in October, Secretary of State Rice knows where the action is, and she's not rooting for the Vols
The NY Times reports here that Alabama-native Condoleeza Rice is meeting with the British Foreign Secretary in Alabama where they will "perform the pregame coin flip when the University of Alabama football team faces Tennessee in Tuscaloosa, and then stay to watch the game."
Here the Washington Post explains that Ms. Rice is an old Bama football fan who once dated Rick Upchurch of the Denver Broncos.
The White House needs to put out some football stories about Harriet Miers. Maybe call in former Dallas Cowboys Roger Staubach, Bob Lilly, Walt Garrison, and Lee Roy Jordan. Or, Bob Hayes, Rayfield Wright, Mel Renfro, and Calvin Hill.
Here the Washington Post explains that Ms. Rice is an old Bama football fan who once dated Rick Upchurch of the Denver Broncos.
The White House needs to put out some football stories about Harriet Miers. Maybe call in former Dallas Cowboys Roger Staubach, Bob Lilly, Walt Garrison, and Lee Roy Jordan. Or, Bob Hayes, Rayfield Wright, Mel Renfro, and Calvin Hill.
On Virginia lawyers and the death penalty
The Washington Post reports here that a gang of mostly members of the Virginia Trial Lawyers Association wrote a protest to the Kilgore campaign about what's wrong with using the fact that Kaine or somebody in his firm represented somebody in a capital murder case as evidence of anything.
After all, everybody charged with a felony is entitled to a lawyer, the Constitution says so, in your Sixth Amendment. I agree with Bob Hall and the VTLA gang - you don't go around bashing lawyers because they fulfilled their professional obligation to provide legal services extends to making sure that a criminal defendant's constitutional right to counsel is realized. I would think that even death penalty supporters would want capital murder defendants to have good lawyers - because in theory (and hopefully in practice), no one can lawfully be sentenced to death, who was not represented at trial by competent, zealous, thoughtful counsel.
Furthermore, although the article doesn't say this, there's no need to bash lawyers, especially not court-appointed ones, to make the point that Kaine and Kilgore are as far apart as can be on the Death Penalty. Unlike judges, who must apply the law regardless of personal views, by contrast, the law imposes no limitation on what the Governor may do in considering a clemency petition for a deathrow inmate. If Tim Kaine says he is opposed to the death penalty, for whatever reason, and you think the death penalty is important, then you want him working as a lawyer and not as Governor.
After all, everybody charged with a felony is entitled to a lawyer, the Constitution says so, in your Sixth Amendment. I agree with Bob Hall and the VTLA gang - you don't go around bashing lawyers because they fulfilled their professional obligation to provide legal services extends to making sure that a criminal defendant's constitutional right to counsel is realized. I would think that even death penalty supporters would want capital murder defendants to have good lawyers - because in theory (and hopefully in practice), no one can lawfully be sentenced to death, who was not represented at trial by competent, zealous, thoughtful counsel.
Furthermore, although the article doesn't say this, there's no need to bash lawyers, especially not court-appointed ones, to make the point that Kaine and Kilgore are as far apart as can be on the Death Penalty. Unlike judges, who must apply the law regardless of personal views, by contrast, the law imposes no limitation on what the Governor may do in considering a clemency petition for a deathrow inmate. If Tim Kaine says he is opposed to the death penalty, for whatever reason, and you think the death penalty is important, then you want him working as a lawyer and not as Governor.
Latest polls
Here is the Diageo/Hotline Poll Of VA, which shows Kaine ahead among all voters but Kilgore ahead among likely voters, in contrast with the SurveyUSA poll which has Kaine ahead among likely voters, and all of everything within the margin of error (or is it Marge Innovera, the Cartalk statistician?).
More on the constitutionality of coal severance taxes
The Coalfield Progress has this report with comments from Mike Quillen of Alpha Natural Resources and Delegate Bud Phillips on the matter of the constitutionality of Virginia's coal severance tax.
Roanoke lawyer Bill Rakes knows Harriet Miers
The Roanoke paper has this column with the observations of Gentry Locke's Bill Rakes on his friend Harriet Miers, whom he got to know in connection with American Bar Association activities. Rakes says she would make a fine justice, and that she is a "by-the-rules sort of person," that she is very personable, yet "tough as nails."
On the importance of correct punctuation
Today I read this on legal writing, and it includes this story on punctuation:
A panda walks in to a café. He orders a sandwich and eats it, then draws a gun and fires two shots in the air. “Why?” asks the confused waiter. As the panda exits, the panda produces a badly punctuated wildlife manual and tosses it over his shoulder. “I’m a panda,” he says, at the door. “Look it up.” The waiter turns to the relevant entry and, sure enough, finds an explanation. “PANDA. Large black-and-white bear-like mammal, native to China. Eats, shoots and leaves.”
A panda walks in to a café. He orders a sandwich and eats it, then draws a gun and fires two shots in the air. “Why?” asks the confused waiter. As the panda exits, the panda produces a badly punctuated wildlife manual and tosses it over his shoulder. “I’m a panda,” he says, at the door. “Look it up.” The waiter turns to the relevant entry and, sure enough, finds an explanation. “PANDA. Large black-and-white bear-like mammal, native to China. Eats, shoots and leaves.”
Monday, October 17, 2005
Good judges with whom to share a foxhole
In this first-person account from Have Opinion, Will Travel, the author relates that he once had a lawyer pass out at the podium, whereupon two judges ran to help the lawyer while the third ran for the exit.
The West Virginia coal severance tax challenge
Here are links to the briefs in U.S. Steel Mining Co., LLC, et al. v. The Hon. Virgil Helton, State Tax Comm’r, before the West Virginia Supreme Court, including:
Opening brief of appellant U.S. Steel
Brief of appellee Tax Commissioner
Reply brief of Appellant
In one of the amicus briefs, the West Virginia Municipal League declares that an end to the tax would be ruinous to West Virginia localities: "It is not a matter of crying wolf or 'Chicken Little, the sky is falling . . .' just turn out the lights on a great number of West Virginia municipalities and their programs."
The always excellent Goodwin firm filed this brief for the County Commissioners' Association.
The issue is whether West Virginia's coal severance tax violates the Import-Export Clause of the U.S. Constitution, Article I, section 10, clause 2, which says: "No State shall, without the Consent of the Congress, lay any Imposts or Duties on Imports or Exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection Laws: and the net Produce of all Duties and Imposts, laid by any State on Imports or Exports, shall be for the Use of the Treasury of the United States; and all such Laws shall be subject to the Revision and Controul of the Congress."
I understand from reading the Virginia Mountaineer that some coal companies are contemplating raising the same issue here in the Commonwealth.
Opening brief of appellant U.S. Steel
Brief of appellee Tax Commissioner
Reply brief of Appellant
In one of the amicus briefs, the West Virginia Municipal League declares that an end to the tax would be ruinous to West Virginia localities: "It is not a matter of crying wolf or 'Chicken Little, the sky is falling . . .' just turn out the lights on a great number of West Virginia municipalities and their programs."
The always excellent Goodwin firm filed this brief for the County Commissioners' Association.
The issue is whether West Virginia's coal severance tax violates the Import-Export Clause of the U.S. Constitution, Article I, section 10, clause 2, which says: "No State shall, without the Consent of the Congress, lay any Imposts or Duties on Imports or Exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection Laws: and the net Produce of all Duties and Imposts, laid by any State on Imports or Exports, shall be for the Use of the Treasury of the United States; and all such Laws shall be subject to the Revision and Controul of the Congress."
I understand from reading the Virginia Mountaineer that some coal companies are contemplating raising the same issue here in the Commonwealth.
Beamer ball turns to Engineering School for ball-carrier brace
Via this Blawg De Novo post, the Washington Post is reporting that the engineers at Virginia Tech are working up a special brace for the arm of injured Hokie tailback Cedric Humes. Tech plays the Maryland Terrapins on Thursday night at College Park on ESPN.
Declaring his faith in the e-schoolers, Humes declared: "My grandmother graduated from the engineering school."
Now, what year was that? Maybe Dad knew her.
Declaring his faith in the e-schoolers, Humes declared: "My grandmother graduated from the engineering school."
Now, what year was that? Maybe Dad knew her.
A guide to oral argument
Via Ohio Law, here is the official guide to oral argument before the Ohio Supreme Court.
The Virginia Supreme Court (and the Virginia Court of Appeals) should have such a guide.
The Virginia Supreme Court (and the Virginia Court of Appeals) should have such a guide.
Kilgore ahead on Tradesports
TradeSports is selling contracts on the Virginia governor's race - the Kilgore price is 60-something, the Kaine price is 30-something.
Money tight again for federal courts
This article from Law.com about the federal court money shortage includes a quote from a deputy clerk on electronic filing: "We can't trust the lawyers to do it right."
His cornerman should have thrown in the towel
Appellate Law & Practice links here to the tale of a lawyer in California who collapsed while being nailed by barrage of unfriendly questions from a panel of appeals court judges.
Sunday, October 16, 2005
One lame idea after another
Jaded JD links (with some glee) to this Newsweek story that says the Bush administration is strong-arming Senator Allen and other presidential aspirants in their latest act of flailing about to secure the consent of the U.S. Senate to the nomination of Harriet Miers to the U.S. Supreme Court.
As I've been thinking football and baseball lately, I'm wondering how the Miers' nomination compares with the Red Sox trading Babe Ruth or the Steelers cutting Johnny Unitas - will history record this nomination as a blunder that starts a funk that lasts for decades? There might not be another Republican nominee to the Supreme Court for 20 years, just as the Democrats had none during the 1970s and 1980s.
As I've been thinking football and baseball lately, I'm wondering how the Miers' nomination compares with the Red Sox trading Babe Ruth or the Steelers cutting Johnny Unitas - will history record this nomination as a blunder that starts a funk that lasts for decades? There might not be another Republican nominee to the Supreme Court for 20 years, just as the Democrats had none during the 1970s and 1980s.
Great night of football
Unlike Chad, 63,000 of my closest friends and I went to the big game in Charlottesville last night, and saw Virginia beat Florida State 26-21. They got the big touchdown right before the half to build a 23-10 lead and held on in the second half, with the aid and comfort of many costly Seminole penalties and giveaways. The much-maligned Marques Hagans out-dueled Drew Weatherford, as both threw more than 35 times and for over 300 yards, but Weatherford gave up three interceptions, including the clincher in the final minute to end Florida State's last possession. As Virginia ran out the clock, a mob swarmed over and through the shrubbery behind the North end zone onto the field, past the out-numbered security forces. As I left, they were climbing the goalposts. The gang in section 127 were almost beyond speech, in part because you can't say much when your grin is too wide to move your lips and your throat too hoarse to be heard anyhow.
Why not more excitement about the governor's race
Rick Sincere links here to this article in the style section of the Washington Post, which quotes Rick and others, on the proposition that there is not much public interest in this year's governor's race.
Saturday, October 15, 2005
Who says no practicing, private sector lawyers blogging against Miers
Southern Appeal suggests that Hugh Hewitt is blind if he thinks there are no private, practicing lawyers blogging against Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers.
Here you can see the Bainbridge online poll regarding the Miers nomination. The last I checked, 69% of his respondents were opposed.
Here you can see the Bainbridge online poll regarding the Miers nomination. The last I checked, 69% of his respondents were opposed.
On the proliferation of new law schools
This article from law.com mentions the Appalachian School of Law and new law schools in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia, in its discussion of the wave of new law schools in the U.S.
Little things mean a lot
I just read The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference by Malcolm Gladwell, a book my sister gave me for my birthday. I had never heard of this book.
Reading it makes me wonder about the political and legal/law business applications of the knowledge in that book. It is very provocative, I recommend it.
Reading it makes me wonder about the political and legal/law business applications of the knowledge in that book. It is very provocative, I recommend it.
Friday, October 14, 2005
Some environmentalists opposing wind power
Wired News has this account of environmentalist opposition to some wind-power projects.
Thursday, October 13, 2005
The man in Clintwood
Brian Patton has passed the Virginia bar - way to go, yeah.
Besides reading his blog, I met him at the conference in Charlottesville.
Besides reading his blog, I met him at the conference in Charlottesville.
Northern Virginia judge still ruling that presumption in DUI law is unconstitutional
The AP reports here that a Northern Virginia general district court judge is still dismissing drunk driving cases on the grounds that the Virginia statute under which intoxication is presumed from a prescribed blood alcohol content is unconstitutional.
Why not a truth-detecting light
It says here that the general district court judge from the Tidewater now facing a complaint before the Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission is "also accused of misleading defendants by telling them his courtroom was equipped with a drug-detecting light."
Wednesday, October 12, 2005
Those crazy West Coast types and their contracts
ContractsProf Blog says here that the Ninth Circuit has ruled that complex and sophisticated loan documents "that provide they cannot be amended except in writing can nevertheless be modified by by oral agreement."
Supreme Court denies cert in Chesterfield Wiccan case
It says here and here that the United States Supreme Court in its infinite wisdom has declined to hear the appeal of the Wiccan woman who sued when she was not allowed on the list of ministers eligible to deliver the invocation at the meetings fo the Chesterfield County Board of Supervisors.
What are the legal credentials of the Senators on the Judiciary Committee?
As the Senate prepares to pass judgment on the nomination of Harriet Miers, it was interesting to read this summary of the legal credentials of the members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which says in part:
"Senator Hatch: A lawyer who received his degree from the Pittsburgh Law School. He then practiced law for 14 years . . .
-Senator Chuck Grassley: Not a lawyer. A farmer and Senator
-Senator Lindsay Graham: Law degree from University of South Carolina. Served a few years as a lawyer in the Air Force. . .
-Senator Kyl: A lawyer who graduated from the University of Arizona (he did serve on Law Review and was one of the names touted for SCOTUS)
-Senator DeWine: A lawyer who graduated from Ohio Northern University Law School
-Senator Sessions: A lawyer who graduated from the University of Alabama. Had a career as small-town lawyer before becoming US Assistant US Attorney for the Southern District of Alabama; then US Attorney for the district and Alabama’s Attorney General for two years.
-Senator Cornyn: Lawyer, graduated from St. Mary’s School of Law in San Antonio (later earned a masters of Law from University of Virginia Law School). Served as District Court Judge and Texas Supreme Court
-Senator Brownback: Law degree from University of Kansas (the picture on his website shows him riding a bull)
-Senator Tom Coburn: Not a lawyer . . .
-Senator Leahy: JD from Georgetown University . . .
-Senator Kennedy: . . .
-Senator Biden: Graduated from Syracuse University College of Law. . . .
-Senator Kohl: Not a lawyer . . .
-Senator Feingold: Lawyer who graduated from Harvard Law School. Practiced law for a few years. . .
-Senator Schumer: Graduated from Harvard Law School. Practiced for only a few years.
-Senator Durbin: Lawyer who graduated from Georgetown; he did practice for a number of years."
Regarding Senator DeWine, he went to the same law school as Clintwood's own Brian Patton.
"Senator Hatch: A lawyer who received his degree from the Pittsburgh Law School. He then practiced law for 14 years . . .
-Senator Chuck Grassley: Not a lawyer. A farmer and Senator
-Senator Lindsay Graham: Law degree from University of South Carolina. Served a few years as a lawyer in the Air Force. . .
-Senator Kyl: A lawyer who graduated from the University of Arizona (he did serve on Law Review and was one of the names touted for SCOTUS)
-Senator DeWine: A lawyer who graduated from Ohio Northern University Law School
-Senator Sessions: A lawyer who graduated from the University of Alabama. Had a career as small-town lawyer before becoming US Assistant US Attorney for the Southern District of Alabama; then US Attorney for the district and Alabama’s Attorney General for two years.
-Senator Cornyn: Lawyer, graduated from St. Mary’s School of Law in San Antonio (later earned a masters of Law from University of Virginia Law School). Served as District Court Judge and Texas Supreme Court
-Senator Brownback: Law degree from University of Kansas (the picture on his website shows him riding a bull)
-Senator Tom Coburn: Not a lawyer . . .
-Senator Leahy: JD from Georgetown University . . .
-Senator Kennedy: . . .
-Senator Biden: Graduated from Syracuse University College of Law. . . .
-Senator Kohl: Not a lawyer . . .
-Senator Feingold: Lawyer who graduated from Harvard Law School. Practiced law for a few years. . .
-Senator Schumer: Graduated from Harvard Law School. Practiced for only a few years.
-Senator Durbin: Lawyer who graduated from Georgetown; he did practice for a number of years."
Regarding Senator DeWine, he went to the same law school as Clintwood's own Brian Patton.
Where does Pete Curcio keep his tickets?
This story from West Virginia is titled "Notre Dame tickets stolen from law office."
More suicides than homicides in Virginia in 2003
The Richmond paper reports here: "More people killed themselves than were killed by others in 2003, according to a new state report that examines details of more than 1,300 suicides, homicides and other violent deaths in Virginia that year."
Tuesday, October 11, 2005
On Bill Hobbs
It says here that Tennessee blogging guru Bill Hobbs is cutting back.
Bill Hobbs has been one of my favorites for years.
One thing in particular I appreciate was that he guaranteed by way of a link back that hundreds of people (the most ever, at the time) read this 2003 post, which says:
---
Bill Hobbs of HobbsOnline says here that he gets a check from his mother in the amount of his age times $1 each year for his birthday. He figures he's losing the battle with time but beating inflation.
That story reminds that my grandmother, who died on August 12, 2002, at the age of 86, would send me each year for my birthday, even after I was a practicing lawyer, a birthday card (sometimes a few days late) with a handwritten note saying how well she remembered getting the long-distance call from Kentucky when I was born and how proud she was that I was her grandson, and inside the card was a one dollar bill. (Unlike Bill Hobbs, I got no cost-of-living adjustment from her, but her list of people to whom she sent cards grew larger as I grew older.)
--
Thanks, Bill.
Bill Hobbs has been one of my favorites for years.
One thing in particular I appreciate was that he guaranteed by way of a link back that hundreds of people (the most ever, at the time) read this 2003 post, which says:
---
Bill Hobbs of HobbsOnline says here that he gets a check from his mother in the amount of his age times $1 each year for his birthday. He figures he's losing the battle with time but beating inflation.
That story reminds that my grandmother, who died on August 12, 2002, at the age of 86, would send me each year for my birthday, even after I was a practicing lawyer, a birthday card (sometimes a few days late) with a handwritten note saying how well she remembered getting the long-distance call from Kentucky when I was born and how proud she was that I was her grandson, and inside the card was a one dollar bill. (Unlike Bill Hobbs, I got no cost-of-living adjustment from her, but her list of people to whom she sent cards grew larger as I grew older.)
--
Thanks, Bill.
Why the judiciary aren't mediocre
A while back, I wrote this post with some of my thoughts about how judges in spite of the system are mostly excellent, citing among other things Judge Posner who wrote in this book: "I may be living in the golden age of the federal appellate judiciary. There may never have been a time when so large a fraction of federal judges were outstanding."
I also told the following tale, heard in the church in D.C. where I was married:
The homilist was some fellow from the Church of England, with a syrupy British accent and bone-dry sense of humor.... He related the story of a young priest assigned to a class of teenagers, who made the mistake one day of opening the floor for questions, and the first question was this: "why are the clergy so mediocre?" He thought a moment, and answered, "because we have only the laity to pick from."
The post also notes this discussion about whether it is good for federal judges to be "mediocre."
As to the U.S. Supreme Court, the question may be, why aren't the Supreme Court justices more mediocre? The answer may be, they've got the federal judiciary (and many other sources of excellence) to pick from. All of which makes me feel short-changed by the nomination of Harriet Miers. From my desk, the appearance is that the president didn't even try to make a great pick. The stated rationale that Bush knows Miers personally and therefore he feels confident how she will vote doesn't cut it with me. The idea doesn't even make sense, judging on the basis of "what would Bush want me to do?"
If the President was going to pick an unknown, and why not, he should have found a well-qualified one, and laughed like Nixon did over Rehnquist, or like Bush himself could have done after the vote was in on Roberts.
I also told the following tale, heard in the church in D.C. where I was married:
The homilist was some fellow from the Church of England, with a syrupy British accent and bone-dry sense of humor.... He related the story of a young priest assigned to a class of teenagers, who made the mistake one day of opening the floor for questions, and the first question was this: "why are the clergy so mediocre?" He thought a moment, and answered, "because we have only the laity to pick from."
The post also notes this discussion about whether it is good for federal judges to be "mediocre."
As to the U.S. Supreme Court, the question may be, why aren't the Supreme Court justices more mediocre? The answer may be, they've got the federal judiciary (and many other sources of excellence) to pick from. All of which makes me feel short-changed by the nomination of Harriet Miers. From my desk, the appearance is that the president didn't even try to make a great pick. The stated rationale that Bush knows Miers personally and therefore he feels confident how she will vote doesn't cut it with me. The idea doesn't even make sense, judging on the basis of "what would Bush want me to do?"
If the President was going to pick an unknown, and why not, he should have found a well-qualified one, and laughed like Nixon did over Rehnquist, or like Bush himself could have done after the vote was in on Roberts.
Did I mention I got the new Edith Maxwell book for my birthday?
It's true, I got the book Never Seen The Moon: The Trials Of Edith Maxwell, about a sensational murder case in Wise County from the 1930s, about which I last wrote this post.
The re-reassignment of the circuits
I am delighted to see here that the new Chief Justice has been assigned as circuit justice for the Fourth Circuit, based on the suspicion that sooner or later I will get to see him at the judicial conference, the Article III groupie that I am.
Interesting First Amendment case being argued this week before U.S. Supreme Court
Here, Nat Garrett of SCOTUSBlog previews the upcoming argument before the Supreme Court in the case of Garcetti v. Ceballos, where an L.A. prosecutor under the notorious Gil Garcetti was retaliated against for telling defense counsel that there was a problem with a warrant obtained by the sheriff's department.
The District Court entered summary judgment for the defendants, because the alleged speech was part of the plaintiff's job duties. The Ninth Circuit panel in an opinion by Judge Reinhardt reversed, concluding that it was a matter of public concern, even if it was job-required speech.
The District Court entered summary judgment for the defendants, because the alleged speech was part of the plaintiff's job duties. The Ninth Circuit panel in an opinion by Judge Reinhardt reversed, concluding that it was a matter of public concern, even if it was job-required speech.
Monday, October 10, 2005
Alternative dispute resolution
From Say What, said to be an actual lease provision (among some Texans):
"13. DISPUTES. If unanimously hereafter agreed by the parties, any disputes regarding this lease shall be settled by an old-fashioned fistfight or best single draw five-card poker hand."
"13. DISPUTES. If unanimously hereafter agreed by the parties, any disputes regarding this lease shall be settled by an old-fashioned fistfight or best single draw five-card poker hand."
Judge Fulton resigns to take Richmond job
Here the Coalfield Progress reports that General District Court Judge Suzanne Fulton has resigned to take a job as "the first director of the Virginia Supreme Court's new Judicial Evaluation Program."
On Miers - the Westlaw headcount theory
Is that Legal posts here (Fifth Circuit) and here (Texas appeals courts) about the number and outcome of published cases in which Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers appeared as counsel, and there are not too many.
I must confess, I looked up her name myself. I think her name is on about 20 opinions, great and small. By contrast, "Lucas Hobbs" (a/k/a the new guy in our firm) is on 39 opinions, and "John G. Roberts, Jr." is on 85 opinions.
I must confess, I looked up her name myself. I think her name is on about 20 opinions, great and small. By contrast, "Lucas Hobbs" (a/k/a the new guy in our firm) is on 39 opinions, and "John G. Roberts, Jr." is on 85 opinions.
Sunday, October 09, 2005
On lawyers who blog
The NY Times has this article which begins: "Inside every lawyer, it is said, there is a brilliant writer, held back by professional ambition or by fear of failure. Nowhere is that truism more evident than in the explosion of online blogs by, for and about lawyers."
Reading and writing, it's what we do.
Reading and writing, it's what we do.
Friday, October 07, 2005
Monkey no. 997,043 liked this one
Here's a quote:
"We've heard that a million monkeys at a million keyboards could produce the complete works of Shakespeare; now, thanks to the Internet, we know that is not true."
"We've heard that a million monkeys at a million keyboards could produce the complete works of Shakespeare; now, thanks to the Internet, we know that is not true."
Hey, I got one of these, too
Norman reacts here to an invitation to include his blog in the archives of the Library of Virginia.
I got the same invitation, thinking at first that it was spam.
So, the two things blogging has got me this week: (1) an invitation to the archives, and (2) I recognized Mark Rubin on the street in Richmond on Thursday.
I got the same invitation, thinking at first that it was spam.
So, the two things blogging has got me this week: (1) an invitation to the archives, and (2) I recognized Mark Rubin on the street in Richmond on Thursday.
No right to get footloose on town property in the Fourth Circuit
In Willis v. Town of Marshall, the Fourth Circuit in an opinion by Judge Traxler, joined by Chief Judge Wilkins, affirmed in part and vacated in part the District Court's disposition of a section 1983 brought against a North Carolina town which had barred the plaintiff from unruly dancing at concerts at the town community center. Judge Williams wrote a separate opinion concurring in part.
The District Court denied the plaintiff's motion for preliminary injunction and granted summary judgment in favor of the town, concluding that the dirty dancing was not constitutionally protected. The majority agreed with the District Court that the plaintiff's style of dancing at the community center was not protected by the First Amendment, but she might have an equal protection claim for being singled out by the Town.
The District Court denied the plaintiff's motion for preliminary injunction and granted summary judgment in favor of the town, concluding that the dirty dancing was not constitutionally protected. The majority agreed with the District Court that the plaintiff's style of dancing at the community center was not protected by the First Amendment, but she might have an equal protection claim for being singled out by the Town.
Your tuition dollars at work
Here it says a gang of Virginia Tech students are trying for a good cause to make the Guinness Book of World Records for biggest pillow fight.
The latest Certworthy
Here Ray Ward has linked to the latest Certworthy, the publication of the DRI Appellate Practice session.
The shame of it all is that I argued an appeal yesterday, and although it may have gone well enough, I was thinking after reading this latest Certworthy that I wish I had read it before we wrote the briefs - I could see how to make them better. And, perhaps the argument went better, although it was not a complicated case.
Read it, write better, argue better.
One of my pet peeves in briefwriting lately has been all sentences starting with the indefinite "it", as in "It is fundamentally unfair." What's the case cite for that fundamental unfairness doctrine, anyway?
P.S. Dad, check out the bit at pp. 26-27 with my name on it, as the reporter for the Fourth Circuit.
The shame of it all is that I argued an appeal yesterday, and although it may have gone well enough, I was thinking after reading this latest Certworthy that I wish I had read it before we wrote the briefs - I could see how to make them better. And, perhaps the argument went better, although it was not a complicated case.
Read it, write better, argue better.
One of my pet peeves in briefwriting lately has been all sentences starting with the indefinite "it", as in "It is fundamentally unfair." What's the case cite for that fundamental unfairness doctrine, anyway?
P.S. Dad, check out the bit at pp. 26-27 with my name on it, as the reporter for the Fourth Circuit.
Thursday, October 06, 2005
Did the local government really have authority for this?
Here is a picture of a monument to Judge Dillon, originator of the Dillon Rule.
The dim bulb test
Ross MacKenzie says here:
"Harriet Miers lacks the heft of many in the judicial monastery - e.g., J. Harvie Wilkinson, Karen Williams and Michael Luttig of the Virginia-based Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, or Chief Justice Leroy Hassell of the Virginia Supreme Court."
He concludes, however:
"And if Bush is not the dim bulb those who detest him insist he is, then the rest of us might be well advised, through faith and intellect, to believe in his nominee."
"Harriet Miers lacks the heft of many in the judicial monastery - e.g., J. Harvie Wilkinson, Karen Williams and Michael Luttig of the Virginia-based Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, or Chief Justice Leroy Hassell of the Virginia Supreme Court."
He concludes, however:
"And if Bush is not the dim bulb those who detest him insist he is, then the rest of us might be well advised, through faith and intellect, to believe in his nominee."
Those incredibly generic Marching Cavaliers
This article says do the right thing and bring back the Pep Band.
At least, they should ban all future performances of "Jungle Boogie."
I've paid money to see marching bands, but the Marching Cavaliers can't hold my interest.
At least, they should ban all future performances of "Jungle Boogie."
I've paid money to see marching bands, but the Marching Cavaliers can't hold my interest.
The Royal family
I read this story about Virginia Tech's WR Eddie Royal and his sister, the cadet commander at Tech, and his brother, who plays in the secondary for Marshall (Tech's upcoming football opponent) this morning and thought it was great.
(I only read USA Today, it seems, at hotels like this morning at the Omni in Richmond.)
(I only read USA Today, it seems, at hotels like this morning at the Omni in Richmond.)
Metadata opinion from U.S. District Court in Kansas
Here, via Steve Emmert and others, is a must-read opinion in a federal court case from Kansas, where the defendant tried to get away with scrubbing the metadata from Excel files it was ordered to produce, related to a reduction in force.
Wednesday, October 05, 2005
Sandra Day O'Connor follows Burger et al. to become Chancellor of William & Mary
The Washington Post reports here that retiring Supreme Court Justice O'Connor will become chancellor of the College of William & Mary.
A lawyer I know, who served on the board of the College, told me once that he had heard somehow or another that retired Chief Justice Warren Burger was bummed when he learned that he was term-limited out of the job of chancellor, that he had enjoyed the idea and wanted to keep the "job" longer.
A lawyer I know, who served on the board of the College, told me once that he had heard somehow or another that retired Chief Justice Warren Burger was bummed when he learned that he was term-limited out of the job of chancellor, that he had enjoyed the idea and wanted to keep the "job" longer.
Dillard on Harriet Miers
Feddie says here that Ms. Miers may have run out to buy a Con Law study aid.
Bainbridge on Harriet Miers
Professor Bainbridge says here that if President Bush is not going to come across on Supreme Court nominations, then what's the point?
Tuesday, October 04, 2005
Sixth Circuit judge throws down on the death penalty
In Moore v. Parker, Judge Martin in dissent unloaded his accumulated views against the death penalty.
More fun than the Harriet Miers nomination

I liked this image so much I stole it.

The original of this fantasy slate for 2009 with commentary can be found here.
Monday, October 03, 2005
Nobody from the Fourth Circuit gets nominated to the Supreme Court
Instead, the nomination went to a graduate of Southern Methodist University, previously known for its football players, up until the NCAA shut down the program.
My old friend Jim Green went to SMU Law. I'm sure he would view this development as further evidence of the destiny of SMU alumni to rule the world.
My old friend Jim Green went to SMU Law. I'm sure he would view this development as further evidence of the destiny of SMU alumni to rule the world.
Sunday, October 02, 2005
Judge Luttig pulls ahead on Tradesports line
Dethroning Judge Williams from her top rank as yesterday's betting favorite, as of this hour on Sunday night, Judge Luttig of the Fourth Circuit has zoomed to the top of the Tradesports bidding at 18.7, with Judge Williams down to 10.0.
What these numbers mean I can't say for sure, as I am not planning to place any wagers.
What these numbers mean I can't say for sure, as I am not planning to place any wagers.
On watching college football thirty-some years ago
Watching Saturday's Alabama win over Florida, I noticed that the home team had a running back wearing No. 10, which caused me to recollect that as a child, not knowing any better, I used to root for Bear Bryant and Alabama football - because they were on television all the time. The first bowl game I can remember was the Sugar Bowl on New Year's Eve, 1973, when they lost to Notre Dame, 24-23.
They had a good running back named Wilbur Jackson, who went on to play a few years in the NFL. In college he wore No. 80, as shown in the picture on this page, with an article in which a former assistant SID discusses the fact that in 1970 Jackson was the first black football player signed to a scholarship at Alabama.
The local team I pulled for was Virginia Tech. When I saw them play sometime around 1974 or 1975, they were running Alabama's wishbone offense with three black running backs, including Phil Rogers from Gate City and Paul Adams from Castlewood. (It says here that in the fall of 1970 a fellow from Radford named John Dobbins became the first black football player for Tech.)
In the world as I knew it in the early 1970s, I had no idea that anyone had ever objected to black men playing college football, but I knew for sure that it was weird for a running back to wear No. 80.
They had a good running back named Wilbur Jackson, who went on to play a few years in the NFL. In college he wore No. 80, as shown in the picture on this page, with an article in which a former assistant SID discusses the fact that in 1970 Jackson was the first black football player signed to a scholarship at Alabama.
The local team I pulled for was Virginia Tech. When I saw them play sometime around 1974 or 1975, they were running Alabama's wishbone offense with three black running backs, including Phil Rogers from Gate City and Paul Adams from Castlewood. (It says here that in the fall of 1970 a fellow from Radford named John Dobbins became the first black football player for Tech.)
In the world as I knew it in the early 1970s, I had no idea that anyone had ever objected to black men playing college football, but I knew for sure that it was weird for a running back to wear No. 80.
Details of JIRC complaint against general district court judge in the Tidewater
The Norfolk paper reports here on the Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission's complaint against General District Court Judge Archie Elliott.
On the October Sky festival
The Bluefield paper reports here on rocket boy Homer Hickam's return to Coalwood for the 7th Annual October Sky festival.
On Goose Pimple Junction
Rex Bowman writes for the Richmond paper about How Goose Pimple got its name.
Goose Pimple Junction is conveniently situated at the bend in the road between the Bristol Country Club and The Virginian.
Goose Pimple Junction is conveniently situated at the bend in the road between the Bristol Country Club and The Virginian.
More on Judge Karen Williams
Via How Appealing, The State in South Carolina has this article with different points of view on whether President Bush should nominate Judge Karen Williams to the U.S. Supreme Court.
On that Ninth Circuit judicial misconduct opinion
References to this opinion from the Ninth Circuit have been booted about the law blogs, most particularly because of this quote from Judge Kozinski's dissent, which will live forever: "Throughout these lengthy proceedings, the judge has offered nothing at all to justify his actions - not a case, not a statute, not a bankruptcy treatise, not a law review article, not a student note, not even a blawg." (Emphasis added.)
I never heard much about the facts, however, until I read this creepy Beldar post. Read it, for the complainant's point of view. What the district court judge did in the case doesn't make any sense.
As an aside, Beldar does jump on the bandwagon having fun with the "blawg" reference, as he says: "oh, how I aspire to someday approach the credibility, or even the popularlity, of a bankruptcy treatise!" Apropos of this topic, beSpacific links here to this Findlaw article by John Dean, of all people, on the use of blogs for legal research.
I never heard much about the facts, however, until I read this creepy Beldar post. Read it, for the complainant's point of view. What the district court judge did in the case doesn't make any sense.
As an aside, Beldar does jump on the bandwagon having fun with the "blawg" reference, as he says: "oh, how I aspire to someday approach the credibility, or even the popularlity, of a bankruptcy treatise!" Apropos of this topic, beSpacific links here to this Findlaw article by John Dean, of all people, on the use of blogs for legal research.
132,000 people in prison for life in the U.S.
Professor Berman links here to this NY Times article about the population of persons sentenced to life in U.S. prisons.
The article says there are 132,000 lifers in the U.S., and explains:
"But now, driven by tougher laws and political pressure on governors and parole boards, thousands of lifers are going into prisons each year, and in many states only a few are ever coming out, even in cases where judges and prosecutors did not intend to put them away forever.
Indeed, in just the last 30 years, the United States has created something never before seen in its history and unheard of around the globe: a booming population of prisoners whose only way out of prison is likely to be inside a coffin."
The article says there are 132,000 lifers in the U.S., and explains:
"But now, driven by tougher laws and political pressure on governors and parole boards, thousands of lifers are going into prisons each year, and in many states only a few are ever coming out, even in cases where judges and prosecutors did not intend to put them away forever.
Indeed, in just the last 30 years, the United States has created something never before seen in its history and unheard of around the globe: a booming population of prisoners whose only way out of prison is likely to be inside a coffin."
What can you say as a judge candidate in Kentucky
Via this Marcia Oddi post, the Louisville paper has this article on the new rule allowing free speech for candidates for judgeships in the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
The article says:
"The new rule says judicial candidates must not 'intentionally or recklessly' make a statement that could be perceived 'by a reasonable person' as committing them to rule a certain way on an issue they could hear."
The article suggests that Kentucky conservatives are seeking to challenge even this limit on judges, to make it easier for them to ferret out the liberals.
The article says:
"The new rule says judicial candidates must not 'intentionally or recklessly' make a statement that could be perceived 'by a reasonable person' as committing them to rule a certain way on an issue they could hear."
The article suggests that Kentucky conservatives are seeking to challenge even this limit on judges, to make it easier for them to ferret out the liberals.
Your top 100 intellectuals
I was amused to read, via this ACS post, a list of top 100 intellectuals, of whom I could place perhaps 20.
ACS notes the controversy that so few were women were included. Others might question why so many NY Times columnists were included, particularly Krugman, of whom Gail Collins wrote in yesterday's Times:
"A classic case of correction run amok involved a column that Paul Krugman wrote on Aug. 19 about the Florida recount in 2000 in which he said that two different news media groups reviewed the ballots and found that 'a full manual recount would have given the election to Mr. Gore.' That was incorrect. Paul tried to clarify things in his next column, but the public editor, Byron Calame, objected that since nothing in the second column was labeled a correction, the original error would survive in the permanent record.
Paul published a correction in his next column. Unfortunately, the correction was based on information published in The Miami Herald that was wrong and had never been formally fixed. Paul appended another correction to the Web version of his column, but asked if he could refrain from revisiting the subject yet again in print.
I agreed, feeling we had reached the point of cruelty to readers. But I was wrong. The correction should have run in the same newspaper where the original error and all its little offspring had appeared. Here it is:
CORRECTION
In describing the results of the ballot study by the group led by The Miami Herald in his column of Aug. 26, Paul Krugman relied on the Herald report, which listed only three hypothetical statewide recounts, two of which went to Al Gore. There was, however, a fourth recount, which would have gone to George W. Bush. In this case, the two stricter-standard recounts went to Mr. Bush. A later study, by a group that included The New York Times, used two methods to count ballots: relying on the judgment of a majority of those examining each ballot, or requiring unanimity. Mr. Gore lost one hypothetical recount on the unanimity basis."
So, your top 100 intellectuals include one fellow who can't quite come out and say that 2 + 2 = 4, or something like that.
ACS notes the controversy that so few were women were included. Others might question why so many NY Times columnists were included, particularly Krugman, of whom Gail Collins wrote in yesterday's Times:
"A classic case of correction run amok involved a column that Paul Krugman wrote on Aug. 19 about the Florida recount in 2000 in which he said that two different news media groups reviewed the ballots and found that 'a full manual recount would have given the election to Mr. Gore.' That was incorrect. Paul tried to clarify things in his next column, but the public editor, Byron Calame, objected that since nothing in the second column was labeled a correction, the original error would survive in the permanent record.
Paul published a correction in his next column. Unfortunately, the correction was based on information published in The Miami Herald that was wrong and had never been formally fixed. Paul appended another correction to the Web version of his column, but asked if he could refrain from revisiting the subject yet again in print.
I agreed, feeling we had reached the point of cruelty to readers. But I was wrong. The correction should have run in the same newspaper where the original error and all its little offspring had appeared. Here it is:
CORRECTION
In describing the results of the ballot study by the group led by The Miami Herald in his column of Aug. 26, Paul Krugman relied on the Herald report, which listed only three hypothetical statewide recounts, two of which went to Al Gore. There was, however, a fourth recount, which would have gone to George W. Bush. In this case, the two stricter-standard recounts went to Mr. Bush. A later study, by a group that included The New York Times, used two methods to count ballots: relying on the judgment of a majority of those examining each ballot, or requiring unanimity. Mr. Gore lost one hypothetical recount on the unanimity basis."
So, your top 100 intellectuals include one fellow who can't quite come out and say that 2 + 2 = 4, or something like that.
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