Public: Law: Courtroom
An Independent Just In Time Blind Judiciary   (+8, -2)  [vote for, against]
Supreme Juries

Aside from the obviously partisan nominating process, the current Judiciary, though independent, is facing challenges even from the strictest constitutionalists. The notion of lifetime appointments in the age of expanding life expectancy is problematic, as is the perception that the courts rule along predictable party lines, it's presumed for instance that Roberts upheld the ACA solely to avoid such a perception.

Some have proposed amending the constitution to set a limit of 12 or 16 years on the Justices. Aside from at least fractionally reducing independence, it's not clear to me how that changes anything.

The idea here is to abolish the notion of a federal suoreme court in favor of a jury system drawn from a pool of State Supreme Court justices, who deliver their verdicts blind. In other words, they do not know when submitting their opinion if it's going to count, a random 9 opinions out of possibly 100s submitted is chosen. Appeals from lower courts do not use the jurors from those courts, and normal precedent rules apply, so there's no reason to believe that the decisions would become less stable, but it appears that they would be more balanced and less political, while also being more democratic
-- theircompetitor, Feb 17 2016

Funny given our discussion http://www.dailymai...-justices-vote.html
[theircompetitor, Mar 12 2016]

An interesting proposal. Do you think consistency of ruling would become a problem in this type of arrangement, or is consistency even something desirable if you want the court to remain apolitical? Or would it over time, fix itself as judges become more aware of their differences?

And would this ultimately place more political pressure on the state courts?
-- RayfordSteele, Feb 17 2016


No doubt the pressures would exist, but I think this has several advantages. It dispenses with the fantasy that they are impartial, in favor of achieving balance statistically. I think given deference to precedent and previous rulings stability would not be a issue.

I think I'm most interested in the blind part. Somehow it feels right

The state pool is the most convenient and I guess most democratic. I don't quite think it could be just editors of law journals, for instance
-- theircompetitor, Feb 17 2016


This is a fine idea, but one would want to go thru the submitted opinions and make sure the ones that counted were the best ones.

Plus what if some judge put lots of time into the opinions but then never got picked to make the cut? Bad for morale! You want to make sure that people who are really putting in the effort get recognized. Otherwise (especially if there are 100s) everyone will just halfass it.

Also, judges might think they are too busy to be bothered with all that, and have their clerks or some lobbyist write the opinion. Lots of people go to law school but then have to wait tables for a living because those high paying partnerships are so choosy. Giving some of those underemployed law school grads a chance to write an opinion would get them some PR and maybe a job. They would probably really work hard at it too.

Finally, I feel like what is proposed here is still too inbred. The internet has made clear that there are a fair number of smart people who live outside the united states. Inviting smart foreigners to write some opinions would bring in fresh ideas. Plus it would give them a chance to get familiar with the good stuff in the US Constitution, some of which they might want to set up in their own countries.
-- bungston, Feb 17 2016


" It dispenses with the fantasy that they are impartial "

Wow, you don't have a very fun fantasy life, do you...

" I think I'm most interested in the blind part. Somehow it feels right "

Yes, that's how Braille works.

" Inviting smart foreigners to write some opinions would bring in fresh ideas "

So the Halfbakery model of the Supreme Court ? That would be interesting.

" The idea here is to abolish the notion of a federal suoreme court "

Is that where S'mores go for judgement ?
-- normzone, Feb 17 2016


Interesting idea. The blind aspect is the key. In the vein of [bungson]'s comments, rather than discarding dozens of opinions, have the panel submit ruling outlines (i.e., I would allow the appeal due to precedents A, B, and C) and randomly select from those. Then farm out the opinion writing to someone who will do a good job. That would keep quality high, while preserving the essence of it.
-- the porpoise, Feb 17 2016


Normzone, sadly I create fantasies for people, I don't live them :)
-- theircompetitor, Feb 17 2016


Hang on hang on. Am I wrong in thinking that (a) in the US juries are used only for findings of fact and (b) that the US Supreme Court is used only for determination on points of law?
-- calum, Feb 17 2016


Not sure what you mean by the second only. The court can decide a law is unconstitutional, but it can also overturn ir uphold lower court rulings on specific cases, thereby rendering a verdict
-- theircompetitor, Feb 17 2016


To whom does the case get presented? Under the current system, the justices get to hear arguments and ask questions before deciding a verdict. Your method seems to overlook or eliminate this bit, which I think is an important bit.
-- tatterdemalion, Feb 17 2016


// Not sure what you mean by the second only. The court can decide a law is unconstitutional, but it can also overturn or uphold lower court rulings on specific cases, thereby rendering a verdict//
To rephrase the question, then, can the US Supreme Court overturn a decision (and thereby render a verdict) on the basis of anything other than an error or misinterpretation as to law (e.g. in relation to the admissibility of evidence) by the inferior court?
-- calum, Feb 18 2016


I think tatter's found a rather largish flaw; the entire system would be very slow and cumbersome in that the verbal arguments would need to evolve into mostly written argumentation (which brings its own perils of change outside of verbal argumentation) or some kind of collective forum.

Perhaps a rotating group of judges can serve as the explorative bench in attempt to flush out questions of the litigants from as many angles as could be thought of, with the resulting answers posted.

These rotating group of judges could be rated as to their overall performance by their peers. Judges with higher score results could have their opinions count more often or be picked more often in the final ruling or somesuch. This way the natural talent (or, grotesquely the most politically-astute) would bubble up to the top.

'bungston's proposal of Making sure the opinions submitted were the best ones' I see as a pitfall.
-- RayfordSteele, Feb 18 2016


[calum] -- I believe it's like any appeal flow -- not sure if that helps the distinction in any way.

[tatter] -- in reality -- and you may have seen in news coverage -- the Q&As are a bit of theater that became a bigger deal in recent decades. Most of the information is submitted via documented briefs, and it's likely rare -- though not impossible, of course -- that a genuinely new question is asked, or the answer is not known before the question.

In any case, clearly, workign mechanisms can be created -- imagine something more akin to a public company's quarterly earnings call -- any number of people speak for the company, and potentially dozens of analysts ask questions.

I agree [Ray] -- "best" breaks the whole point -- the idea here is to accept that ideologies differ --and perhaps should continue to influence given the pool -- but should be statistically ameliorated. While in practice the Obamacare decisions show you do not always get the outcomes you expected, the amount of partisan fighting over the judges shows that in fact that's what the political branch is shooting for. This is an attempt to stop that.

In addition[bungston] -- there's no shortage of opinions. It's not like everyone from law students to high school students doesn't write essays on capital punishment. Best would become "referendum". I think law cannot be THAT dynamic.
-- theircompetitor, Feb 18 2016


But the case presentation is often the best part of the experience. Bad enough that we will have to do without the entertainment of Scalia's lines of inquiry, as much as I disagreed with him on many topics, he was always fun to listen to. This method would effectively create a court of nine Clarence Thomases and I can think of few things less exciting.

As well there is an entire cottage industry created to coax out whatever potential leanings that may be evident in the questions from the justices that will no longer have purpose. This is half the fun, especially for contentious cases, we need some insight so we can be surprised when we guessed wrong.

Practically it's not a reasonable suggestion as it would require a constitutional amendment which is something that might never happen again in the history of the country, certainly not for a motion which takes away power from both of the other branches of government.
-- tatterdemalion, Feb 18 2016


I agree it's not a likely proposal to occur in the near term, [tatter]. An amendment stripping lifetime appointments is something that has some traction and may occur, especially as life expectancy grows
-- theircompetitor, Feb 18 2016


Funny that, supreme court justice has always been high on my list of dream jobs, aside from the whole living in that part of the country thing.
-- normzone, Feb 18 2016


I think judicial independence is sufficiently important that it's warranted for now. And I suppose if life expectancy is in the 120 range, nominating a justice for 80 years is the least of your problems :)
-- theircompetitor, Feb 18 2016


Eventually some Google aggregation app will be our judge.

"My logic is undeniable..."
-- RayfordSteele, Feb 18 2016


Normzone, sadly I create fantasies for people, I don't live them :) — theircompetitor, Feb 17 2016

Well then, for all your vaunted prowess you should reassess your priorities. Life is short.
-- normzone, Feb 18 2016


you referring to my vaunted powers of persuasion?

I have grandchildren. Believe me, my priorities are all in order :)

Besides, no one outside of Hollywood fantasy has been able to build what I'm looking for. That's why I'm building it for real. As someone in the press recently said -- and I quote "A place where you can “ride with Genghis Khan or dance to Chaka Khan"" makes what I'm building the most anticipated virtual world of 2016
-- theircompetitor, Feb 18 2016


You've been building that thing for a couple years now. Finished yet?

My father just became a great-grandfather. Blows my mind.
-- RayfordSteele, Feb 19 2016


Stripping lifetime appointments is an honorable goal, but currently it is difficult to say how much support it would get. We may learn a lot more about that over the coming year. Any such proposal would mean the end of a term would be known well in advance, and so it's hard to predict whether that would be seen as positive or negative.
-- tatterdemalion, Feb 20 2016


// You've been building that thing for a couple years now. Finished yet?// It wouldn't be the most anticipated then, would it :)

You don't build the metaverse in seven days, or at least I couldn't. Very sadly, my co-founder and partner for 30 years passed away suddenly and it took more than a year to recover from that (he is irreplaceable as coders go). But we're getting there.
-- theircompetitor, Feb 20 2016


Nice new link there, [tc]

[-] it's my (totally unresearched) understanding that SCJ's opinions are supposed to be representative of the US at a federal level, thus picking State Justices' opinions would be counterproductive. And that's before we get to the part where you're requiring people who already have jobs to do other people's jobs as well.
-- FlyingToaster, Mar 12 2016



random, halfbakery