Posted by
Curt Short (nom de cyber) on Friday, October 27, 2006 1:45:57 AM
When the now
notorious case of Hamdan v. Rumsfeld
was handed down earlier this summer, there were many on the Left who heralded the
ruling as a vindication of our essential constitutional order. Many a self-subscribing free-thinker waxed
eloquent about our forefathers, a group whose mention is often the subject of
much dispute (especially when it appears in an opinion by Scalia or Thomas). The proffered justification for this righteous
indignation, we were assured, was not mere vitriol against the current
Administration, but truly a strict devotion to the crucial doctrine of
“Separation of Powers.” It is thus with
great wonder that I note that not one of those “patriots” are similarly
concerned about the recent decision of the New Jersey Supreme Court. In that decision, released on October 25, 2006, that
Court ordered, “[that] the Legislature must either amend the marriage statutes
or enact an appropriate statutory structure within 180 days of the date of this
decision.” Slip Op. at 65-66.
A careful reading
of the opinion exposes other insincerities (such as granting de-facto gay
marriage, so long as no one calls it ‘marriage’), but the one that strikes me
as the egg on the face of We the People is the shameless abuse rendered against
the Separation of Powers Doctrine. The
hair-splitting solution required by the Court’s convoluted ruling gives the
people of New Jersey a Hobson’s
choice:
“The State can
fulfill that constitutional requirement in one of two ways. It can either amend
the marriage statutes to include same-sex couples or enact a parallel statutory
structure by another name, in which same-sex couples would not only enjoy the
rights and benefits, but also bear the burdens and obligations of civil
marriage.”
Slip Op. at 65.
This judicial
mandate compels the people’s branch of government—the legislative branch—to
enact legislation, to choose between two mandatory alternatives. There is no third option, and inaction
clearly will not suffice. This seems a
little forward for the “least dangerous” branch, the one which our newly-forgotten
friend Publius assured us would never endanger “the general liberty of the
people…so long as the judiciary remains truly distinct from both the legislative
and the executive” functions. The Federalist No. 78.
The concept of
judicial review involves considering two sources of law, one superior and one
inferior, and determining whether there is a conflict between them. Marbury
v. Madison, 5 U.S.
137 (1803). Where a conflict is found,
the function of a court is to establish the scope of the conflict, and to show
how and why the inferior law must abate.
Judicial review does not contemplate enacting legislation on behalf of
the legislature, nor is it compatible with a court dictating to a legislature
the specific contents of laws the court might desire. Judicial review as a practice is destructive,
not constructive. When a court proposes a
particular political expedient, as seen in New Jersey,
it has crossed the line from interpreting the law as the judicial branch, to
promulgating the law, the rightful province of which belongs solely to the
legislature.
Oddly enough, the Supreme
Court of New Jersey is clearly not ignorant of the doctrine of Separation of
Powers: “The doctrine…has not only been
accepted as a cardinal principle of American constitutional law but has been
relied upon from our earliest days as a nation as a fundamental and
indispensable bulwark against despotism.”
Mulhearn v. Federal Shipbuilding
& Dry Dock Co., , 2 N.J. 356, 365 66 A.2d 726, 730 (N.J., 1949),
(citing, inter alia, Montesquieu, The Spirit of Laws, c. VI, The
Constitution of England (1746) and The
Federalist Nos. 47 -51).
And for current evidence
of this doctrine, the Court would have needed to look no further than Article
III of the New Jersey’s
Constitution of 1947, which provides:
“The powers of
the government shall be divided among three distinct branches, the legislative,
executive, and judicial. No person or persons belonging to or constituting one
branch shall exercise any of the powers properly belonging to either of the
others, except as expressly provided in this Constitution.”
Indeed, New
Jersey’s high court has often seen fit to pay homage to this doctrine, when it
so chooses: “While no rule of thumb will
cover all the cases, in general it may be said that no deviation from the
constitutional provisions incorporating the doctrine of the separation of
powers will be tolerated which impairs the essential integrity of one of the
great branches of government.” Morss v. Forbes, 24 N.J. 341, 372, 132
A.2d 1, 18 (N.J., 1957); see also Id.
at 385, 132 A.2d at 26 (Weintraub, dissenting) (“[T]he same principle of
separation of powers forbids the judiciary to exercise a discretion vested in
the legislative or executive branch, or to review an exercise of that
discretion in an area which is purely political and does not involve the rights
or liabilities of a litigant.”); Casamasino
v. Hudson County, 730 A.2d 287 (N.J., 1999) (“Where one branch of
government has been specifically vested with the authority to act in a
prescribed manner, neither of the other branches may usurp that authority.”).
The obvious weakness
in this arbitrary selection, of when to honor (and when to ignore) the Separation
of Powers Doctrine, is its hypocrisy.
That hypocrisy makes it increasingly difficult to trust those on the
Left when they preach about the notion of the Rule of Law. To
the outside observer, it looks more like an Emperor making up rules on the spot
to justify his whim.
In contrast, the
litany of states who have chosen to implement “Marriage-Protection” Amendments
to their state constitutions stand as proof positive, that when Conservatives
say they believe in Federalism (a sister principle to Separation of Powers),
they pursue political results the long, arduous, old-fashioned (constitutional)
way: They get citizens to vote on the
state level. Indeed, the failure of the
proposed federal Marriage-Protection Amendment owes more to the adherence among
Conservatives to legal principles than it does to Liberal activism on any real
scale.
Those on the Left
cannot conceive of such dogmatic faith to a set of timeless truths. For them, that sort of legal formalism became
passé a century ago, and under the self-described banner of “Legal Realism,”
many in the legal community are really just cynics without law, or worse, using
the law when it suits them. Let us hope
that the Emperor’s new fashion sense does not gain any more popularity.
IRK
26 October 2006