Court Opinion

ID: 9775835
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-29 19:10:45.129631+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:32:31.305646
License: Public Domain

CONCURRING OPINION ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
CORNYN, Justice,
concurring.
I write only to respond to the dissenting justice’s accusations in his opinion on motion for rehearing that the court has “once again demonstrate^] its lack of concern for important human rights,” supra at 221, that the court has “erect[ed] a double standard for justice in Texas,” supra, at 222, and that the court is “seeking ways to subvert [the right to trial by jury].” supra at 223.
It is not unusual for judges to disagree about the merits of a contested legal issue; it happens everyday in this court and in courts throughout the nation. It has obviously occurred in this case. It is another thing altogether for a judge to declare himself to be the champion of one side of a case, while ignoring or summarily dismissing the legal rights of an opposing party. Texans expect and are entitled to better from the individuals to whom they have entrusted the solemn duty of administering equal justice under law than to resort to personal attacks on those with different views of the law.
It is a judge’s job to carefully weigh competing interests and strike a delicate, perhaps imperfect, balance between those competing interests. That is what the court has done in this case. Obviously, the dissenting justice disagrees. But as Roscoe Pound, Dean Emeritus of the Harvard Law School, has written:
The opinions of the judge of the highest court of a state are no place for intemperate denunciation of the judge’s colleagues, violent invective, attributing of bad motives to the majority of the court, and insinuations of incompetence, negligence, prejudice, or obtuseness of fellow members of the court.
Roscoe Pound, Cacoethes Dissentiendi: The Heated Judicial Dissent, 39 A.B.A.J. 794, 795 (Sept. 1953). The dissenting justice’s remarks represent another example of an unfortunate tendency toward intoler-*221anee for honest differences of legal opinion on this court.1
HECHT, J., joins this concurring opinion on motion for rehearing.

. See e.g., Boyles v. Kerr, 1992 WL 353277 (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting) ("the majority rewrites Texas law and recants the respect for human dignity affirmed by this court in St. Elizabeth Hospital [v. Garrard, 730 S.W.2d 649 (Tex.1987) ]”); Elabaor v. Smith, 845 S.W.2d 240 (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting) ("plunging helter-skelter into uncharted territory to save another medical doctor that a jury found to have committed malpractice, the majority writes without regard to the chaotic effect of its ruling....”); Russell v. Ingersoll-Rand, 841 S.W.2d 343 (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting) ("henceforth any action for the death of a loved one can be barred before it accrues.... That is the objective of another injustice committed by a majority that is not slowed in the slightest either by a statute ... or its own recent writing to the contrary”); Walker v. Packer, 827 S.W.2d 833, 846 (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting) ("many judicial excesses far beyond the scope of anything alleged in this particular case will henceforth receive only an official nod and wink from the Texas Supreme Court"); Stewart Title Guar. Co. v. Sterling, 822 S.W.2d 1, 13 (Tex.1991) (Doggett, J., dissenting) ("The court’s growing fear that victims of injustice will get too much justice causes it to confer a windfall on wrongdoers”); Moreno v. Sterling Drug, Inc., 787 S.W.2d 348, 367 (Tex.1990) (Doggett, J., dissenting) ("the court’s opinion can rightly be recorded as one of the most anti-family decisions in recent memory”).