Source: http://johnqbarrett.com/2017/06/
Timestamp: 2019-04-24 13:57:35+00:00

Document:
On Monday, June 5, 1950, the last day of its 1949-50 term, the Supreme Court of the United States announced its judgments and released written opinions in seventeen cases. The Court then began its summer recess. The public, beginning with the daily press, struggled to read and absorb such a quantity of Court decisions.
Our courts have been notoriously backward in their public relations, and in none of them is this failing more conspicuous than in the Supreme Court of the United States. Last week, for example, that high tribunal dumped 18 [sic] opinions into the lap of bewildered newspaper and radio reporters. Some of these opinions were of great importance…. It was utterly impossible for the newsmen to read and digest so many opinions in so few hours, and if they could have done so most newspapers would have had great difficulty in giving adequate coverage to so large an output.
Such a heavy accumulation of cases usually occurs only at the end of the term. But that is serious enough, for the justices have a habit of putting off until the last opinion day some of the most troublesome and important cases. The result is that some momentous decisions go almost unnoticed by the public. Perhaps it is of no concern to the court whether its output is properly communicated to the people. Yet we do not see how any body in a democratic land could take such an attitude, and this seems to apply especially to the Supreme Court, which, lacking both purse and sword, is dependent upon the acceptance of its rulings by public opinion.
Even at the cost of some inconvenience to itself, we should think the court would abandon its dumping practice and regulate the flow of its opinions to the public more evenly. It is difficult to see how any harm could be done by such a policy, and it would certainly facilitate understanding of the court and its opinions on the part of the public.
The Supreme Court has, over time, to some degree, listened. It now hands down decisions on multiple days of some weeks, especially toward the end of its term. In the current month, for example, as this Court term headed to its end, the Justices announced decisions on six separate days, including three days last week.
But some Court work, like all human work, gets done against a final deadline, even if it is one that is self-imposed. Each Court term will have a final “opinion day.” And sometimes, such as today, it will be a Monday.
The Supreme Court today completed its scheduled work for the 2016-17 term. It announced judgments and released opinions in three cases that had been argued in April. It also vacated the lower court judgment in another case and sent it back for reconsideration in light of a major Court decision (Ziglar v. Abbasi—see below) that was announced last week. The Court put two other cases, in which it had heard oral arguments last winter as an eight-justice Court, before Justice Gorsuch’s appointment, over for reargument next Fall. And in two cases challenging President Trump’s “travel ban” executive order, the Court granted in part and denied in part the President’s request to stay lower court orders enjoining the executive order, and it ordered the parties to file briefs on a schedule that will permit the Court to hear oral arguments in the cases next October.
The Supreme Court’s latest decisions include many of legal significance and general public interest. For students of Justice Robert H. Jackson’s career, one recent decision to note is Ziglar v. Abbasi (click here), where the Court, by a vote of 4-2, dismissed claims against federal officials who were accused of responsibility for the severe mistreatment of Middle Eastern men who were in the U.S. illegally at the time of the 9/11 attacks and were detained for immigration violations. In his Ziglar v. Abbasi dissenting opinion, Justice Stephen Breyer, joined by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, quoted two of Justice Jackson’s most striking and enduring metaphors, and cautions: that the Constitution should not be misinterpreted as a “suicide pact” (from Jackson’s dissenting opinion in Terminiello v. United States (1949)), and that mistakenly broad views of executive power under the Constitution can lie about “like a loaded weapon”…. (from Jackson’s dissent in Korematsu v. United States (1944)).
This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged Chalmers Roberts, Jackson List, Justice Jackson, Justice Neil M. Gorsuch, Justice Robert H. Jackson, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Justice Stephen Breyer, Korematsu v. United States, loaded weapon, recess, Robert H. Jackson, suicide pact, Supreme Court, Terminiello v. United States, Washington Post, Ziglar v. Abbasi on June 26, 2017 by jqb.

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