Source: http://www.cliothemis.com/Rue-d-Ulm-Comparative-Judicial
Timestamp: 2019-04-21 08:59:24+00:00

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2. Thus for the common law judge, there is no specific form that must be used in rendering a judgment. The choice of form, and of the words that are used, derives– inductively – from the specific situation with which the judge is faced. Everything works from the unique set of facts upwards to the relevant rules of law that controls it, and the judge’s narration of the facts usually points to one or more precedents that then dictate the outcome of the case at hand. The facts lead to the operative precedent and then back down to the facts themselves, now definitively resolved.
Would Cardozo have applied these words to French judicial making ? This paper provides an answer.
5. So the French decision inextricably derives from the choice of words, the construction of sentences and paragraphs, the seizing of the appropriate and controlling code section and the holding (or dispositif). Where forme and fond are well suited, the French opinion, like the one from American judges, best does its job of doing justice.
6. Mimin at once describes in great detail apt or inapt words, paragraphs (for "their simple value as literary expression") and the classic form of the decision : subject of the action, grounds, texts of the law, motives, terms, etc. The whole must confirm indomitable, impregnable and unassailable logic leading to justice. Any misplaced word, each barbarism, banality, or needless redundancy tends to destroy logic, like an off-key note will ruin a piece of music.
7. How then, given this poethics of French judicial decision, is this profound study of judges’ style not better known ? Paradoxically, the explanation can be found precisely in the realm of this strong logic. The judge, a human being after all, would rather situate himself under the rubric of implacable logic than Cardozian creativity. From start to finish, the French judicial opinion advances like a war machine, as if the judge were only a soldier of the code, as if the tools of language would only serve an officer of higher rank than the judge, a master who dominates his judicial servant robbing him of all freedom of choice. The French judge sometimes seems to be less a wise poet than he is a logical machine ! This may explain why, although there is a place for the “facts” in French appellate judgements, it is sharply reduced and made deductively subservient to the code section that doubtlessly controls the situation.
8. Is this not a paradox ? Mimin insists on a freedom of choice that seems in the end to deny that very freedom. The intractable formal logic of the French opinion dictates a form to the judge, whereas the Anglophone judge, who reasons unlike his French colleague, may (if he wishes) seize his own purely inductive logic to establish her own structural guidelines. He writes in almost total freedom, the same as the poet’s, free to create a narrative based on the point of fact [Minim, 372] which is often elaborated in a manner unheard of and perhaps unacceptable to the French judge.
9. Yet, there is a strong counter flow, a more liberated and life-centered one, in French thought about judicial writing. So such French legal stylists as Francois Gény (admired by Cardozo throughout his essays – see Cardozo Writings, 28,111,123,136,156,163-4,168,225-6,266 —) [see also Chazal] have urged French judges to be far more fact-infused and far freer in choice of form than they appear to be ; he and André Tunc have asked for a more “realistic” jurisprudence, one which will be influenced by “the complex and ineluctably changing movement of social life” [Gény, 195].
10. So where today most see the inflexible nature of French judicial form, which seems to rob the judge of the creative potential so dear not only to Cardozo but to judges going back to King Solomon, French thought itself locates an alternative, an emphasis on “social life” that of course can only emerge in a judicial decision through an emphasis on the facts of each new case !
11. We now compare two decisions in order to elaborate better the poethic or non-poethic aspect of judicial methods in France and America. I have chosen two rather ordinary opinions both of which deal with traffic accidents. The first comes from the Cour de cassation in October 1995 ; the second from the Court of Appeals in Louisiana in 2003. Both decisions reverse the opinion of the lower court judge. Where does the poethic method stand in close readings of these two documents ? How well does form serve function and how alert to “life” are the appellate judges in these two cases ?
12. The automobile accident which is the subject of this appeal happened at a location where the width of Village Lane narrowed from what would be two lanes into one. Plantiff, Brittni Owens, was in the inside lane behind defendant, Joann Brown, who was in the outside lane. The Owens vehicle struck Brown’s vehicle on the driver’s side door. Owens filed suit against Brown and Brown’s insurer, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company. The trial court ruled that Owens was 100% at fault. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse and render judgment based on principles of comparative fault.
13. The accident occurred on October 9, 2001, on Village Lane in Bossier City, Louisiana. Airline Drive is a heavily traveled thoroughfare running north and south. Brittni Owens turned off Airline Drive onto Village Lane heading west to the Outback Steak House where she was employed. At the Airline Drive intersection, Village Lane is divided by a grass median with its westbound and eastbound lanes wide enough to accommodate two vehicles ; however, there are no center line markings. Within a short distance, approximately 50 yeards, the median ends and the westbound roadway tapers into one lane. At this point there is one lane for eastbound traffic and one lane for westbound traffic. This transition zone where the road tapers into one lane has no signs, markings, or warning devices. Because there is no center line marking two lanes, it is difficult to tell which lane drops off and which continues.
14. On the date of the accident, Joann Brown drove out of the parking lot of the Bossier Federal Credit Union at the north corner of Airline and village Lane. Brown turned onto Village Lane heading west along the outside curb and proceeded at a slow speed. At the point where the street begins to merge into one lane are five drive-through lanes at the rear of the credit union building. Brown was looking at these lanes to insure that traffic did not flow out in front of her.
15. According to Owens, just before the accident Brown’s vehicle was stoopped in the outside lane near the point where that lane ends. Owens stated that she could see the brake lights of Brown’s vehicle and that Brown was looking down as if doing paperwork. Owens states that she concluded that Brown would not pull over, but kept looking at Brown’s face to see if Brown would look : "That way I would know whether to slow down or not. And she never did [look]." Owens continued to drive on and so did Brown. Owens testified that she slammed on her brakes, but her vehicle struck Brown’s vehicle on the driver’s side door. Owens speculated that Brown intended to make a U-turn at the end of the median.
16. Brown testified that just prior to the accident, she had left the parking lot of the credit union and was westbound along the curb closest to the credit union (farthest from the median). She stated that she was probably driving four or five miles an hour and was looking toward her right in the direction of the credit union drive-through exits to make sure that no cars were coming out of the drive-through onto Village Lane. Brown denied stopping her vehicle prior to the accident. Although she was moving slowly, she denied making any suddent movement to turn or merge into the left lane. She also denied intending to make any kind of U-turn. According to Brown’s testimony, she saw Owens’ vehicle in her side mirror "seconds before the impact," and knew she was going to be hit. Brown stated that at the time of impact, she was "more in the middle of the road," merging into the one-lane area. Brown admitted that she did not look in her rearview mirror at that poing. Brown confirmed that Owens’ vehicle struck the driver’s door.
17. The trier of fact is owed great deference in its allocation of fault and may not be reversed unless clearly wrong. Clement v. Frey, 95-1119, 95-1163 (La.01/16/96), 666 So.2d 607 ; De Los Reyes v. USAA Casualty Insurance Co., 28,491 (La.App.2d Cir.06/26/96), 677 So.2d 668. Like the assessment of damages, fault allocation is a factural determination and the trier of fact, unlike the appellate court, has the benefit of viewing firsthand the witnesses and evidence. Clement, supra. Only after making the finding that the record supports that the lower court abused its great discretion can the appellate court disturb the award, and then only to the extent of lowering it (or raising it) to the highest (or lowest) point which is reasonably within the discretion afforted that court. Clement, supra ; Hill v. Moreouse Parish Police Jury, 95-1100 (La.01/16/96), 666 So.2d 612 ; Coco v. Winston Industries, Inc., 341 So.2d 332 (La. 1977).
18. The trial court applied only the presumption that a motorist in a rear-end collision has breached the duty of not following too closely. In this case, Owens was driving the following vehicle. Although seeing Brown’s vehicle and Brown’s inattention, she continued on, believing in her right to do so. The trial court was right in finding that Owens was at fault.
19. On the other hand, Brown admitted that her attention was not focused on the traffic on Village Lane immediately prior to the accident. She did not look to her left or in her rearview mirror, but continued on at the location where the roadway narrowed to a single lane. As she moved forward, she did not see Owens’ vehicle. Under these factual circumstances, we conclude that Brown cannot be free of fault. We conclude that Brown breached the statutory duty to be an attentive driver and that this was a cause of the accident.
20. Having found that Brown was negligent and that her negligence was a legal cause of the accident, we are required to attribute fault to her in accordance with the legal principles set forth above. Finding that 50% is the lowest point which is reasonably within the discretion afforded to the trial court, we allocate 50% fault to Brown and reduce Owens’ fault to 50%.
21. Owens’ special damages were stipulated to be $4,850.17, including medical costs and property damage. Owens had pain in her back, nect, and wrist primarily during the first month following the accident. She saw a chiropractor for two months. Her pain was better during the second month ; she was having no problems at the time of trial. However, she testified that for about six weeks after the accident she could not lift anything at her job as a waitress.
22. As previously noted, Owens’ special damages were stipulated to $4,850.17. To those damages, we add general damages in the $2,500 ; both damage awards, of course, are subject to a 50% reduction for the fault apportioned to Owens.
23. For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the trial court is reversed, and judgment is hereby rendered awarding Owens $4,850.17 in special damages and $2,500 in general damages, both awards subject to reduction by the 50% fault assessed to Owens. Costs are assessed to defendants-appellees.
24. A car was driving slowly in a highway rest-stop when a person who had placed himself onto the body of this car had a fatal fall. An appeals court which accomodates the request for compensation by eligible claimants of this victim by holding that he had not committed an inexcusable fault while at the same time noting that the victim had clung to the roof of the moving car and that he had fallen on his own, without the action of the brake does not consider the legal consequences of its findings.
Whereas it follows from this text that the victims of a traffic accident, other than drivers may find themselves charged with their own fault if that is either unexcused or the exclusive cause of the accident.
28. REVERSES, in all its provisions, the judgment rendered on June 8, 1993, between the parties, by the Bordeaux appeals court ; consequently, restores the case and the parties to where they were before that judgment and remands to the Toulouse court of appeals for proceedings consistent with this judgment.
30. ANALYSIS. Owens v. Brown, Ct, of Appeals of Louisiana (864 So 2d 640, 2003). For the American appeals court, judgment begins with “life” – with the facts of the case. Here, two motorists trabeling slowly in the saem direction collided, and the one who was injured sued for damages but lost in the lower court. That court found that her negligence was 100% responsible for her own injury. On appeal – and this is typical of American appellate courts, unlike those in France – the facts of the day of the accident and of the collision itself are rehearsed in great detail and prior to any call upon legal authority. Without the most thorough narration of the facts, five paragraphs totalling 59 lines or about 40% of the opinion, the legal issues in the case cannot even be articulated ! The facts lead up to the code or the precedents, not the reverse. The method is inductive. The judge is trained, like all common lawyers, to begin with the facts, which are assumed to be unique in each case.
32. Louisiana is the only American jurisdiction to use a code for almost all legal areas, including the one both of the cases I treat here involve, namely Torts. Despite the state’s Code civil heritage, however, its courts as we are seeing employ the common law fact-saturated approach to decision making. The ratio of fact to law in Owens is more heavily weighted to facts even than the converse ratio to law that we will find in Soulard v. Barry. Before the legal authority is even mentioned (in the third-to-last paragraph), the focus on defendant Brown’s negligent inattention to Owens’ vehicle (in the fourth-to-last paragraph) climaxes the Court’s rehearsal of the facts and inevitably leads to a decision where both parties are found to be at fault and hence where Brown must pay part of Owens’ damages. As we will see in Soulard, the statutory law has pride of place and seems to dominate the facts, if not numerically than certainly structurally.
34. In Owens v. Brown, this fusion is embodied in such fact-infused phrases as “ . . . heading west to Outback Steak House where she was employed . . .”. This innocuous phrase precisely exemplifies Gény’s “social life”, and it is there to remind us that the injured plaintiff was going to work, a suitable and necessary thing to do, when the accident took place.
that Owens’ vehicle struck the driver’s door.
36. The narrative form of the fact recitation here – Owens’ context of good citizen heading to work compared to Brown’s somewhat idle failure to check for cars behind her – establishes the justice of the decision that although Owens hit Brown, Brown must pay half of the costs of Owens’ injuries.
Soulard v. Barry, Cour de Cassation, 1995.
37. One can only imagine what an American appellate judge might have made, from “life,” of the barely described factual circus in this case. But the French court gives us just enough to whet our appetite, to evoke perhaps from each reader his or her own imaginary rendition of what happened. Apparently the deceased (Barry) whose family has sued for damages climbed aboard the defendant’s vehicle – perhaps while it was already slowly moving – and then fell to his death without the driver’s suddenly applying the brakes or doing anything else to alter the dangerous situation.
38. Barred by the ineluctable demands of French judicial form to go any further before citing a controlling law, the Cour de Cassation moves quickly to the operative statute, where it seems comfortable – Article 3, paragraph 1 of the Law of July 5, 1985. Code controls facts, instead of the reverse for the Anglophone judge. 39. Yet the facts re-appear in the decision, as though the Cour de cassation were yearning for an opportunity to make them mesh with its legal decision ; there is even a key phrase that is directly analagous to the heavily elaborated section in Owens v Brown where Owens’s generally respectable comportment is contrasted with Brown’s indifference to her surroundings as the factual prelude that formally leads to a decision against Brown.
The body of this car fell . . .
40. A bit of Gény’s “social life” emerges in the seemingly unnecessary factual allusion to the “highway rest-stop” [sur une aire de stationnement] ; it is the “Outback Steak House where she worked” detail of this French decision, but it is not fully woven into a larger picture. Whereas American judicial form both permits and encourages the judge-as-story-teller, thus permitting the Louisiana court to contrast plaintiff and defendant, the French court can only evoke a respectable defendant just needing to take a break from driving and actually goes on to say nothing about why the decedent decided to climb on the slowly moving vehicle of M. Soulard.
41. The Cour de Cassation leaves, wilfully, the reader in the dark. There is no attempt to make the outcome appear just through an effective use of form. Yet there is just the hint of Gény’s “social life”, enough to whet the appetite but go no further.
42. My judgment on the French judgment would have been Cardozo’s : the feebleness that is born of the lack of form [Cardozo, 340] predominates here. It is not redeemed by an outmoded and inflexible formal paragraph-by-paragraph structure.
43. The French judge, inspired by Cardozo, Gény, Tunc and Mimin, needs to be liberated into the living world in which— and on which – judgments operate. Readers should be in touch, without having to reach out to non-judicial elaboration, with every factual aspect of the case the judges deem worthy of incorporating into the structure of their opinion.
Benjamin N.Cardozo, Collected writings, ed. Margaret F. Hall , New York, Matthew Bender, 1947.
Jean-Pascal Chazal, “Léon Duguit et François Gény, “Controverse sur la rénovation de la science juridique”, Revue interdisciplinaire d’études juridiques, volume 65, 2010, p. 85-133 who argues that Gény’s view of incorporating “life” into judicial opinions was subtle and at times skeptical ; yet “he recognizes the necessity of opening juridical studies and judges’ methods to the social world and asks for an interdisciplinarity that will enrich judicial thought . . “.
François Gény, Méthode d’interprétation et sources en droit privé positif : essai critique, 2e éd., Paris, LGDJ, tome 2, 1932.
Pierre Mimin, Le Style des jugements, vocabulaire, construction, dialectique, formes juridiques, Paris : Librairies techniques, 4e edition, 1970.
Richard Weisberg, Poethics and Other Strategies of Law and Literature, New Yprk, Columbia University Press, 1992.

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