July 28, 2024
by Stephen Stofka
This week’s letter continues my look at a method of judicial interpretation called textualism. For fifteen years, I have been writing regularly, trying to understand systems of power and thought that are bigger than my readers or myself. We are often unaware how much our daily lives are shaped by some ethical philosophy that guides the institutions that determine the rules we live by. Over the past two decades, the Roberts’ Court has increasingly used textualist interpretation to upend decades of precedent. The Court has overturned Roe, and several justices have same sex marriage protections in their sights as the next precedent to fall. They have redefined the Second Amendment as an individual right and set severe restrictions on affirmative action considerations used in college admissions.
The economist John Maynard Keynes once commented that we were slaves to the ideas of some defunct economist. The same can be said about judicial interpretation. Justice Scalia, the leading proponent of textualism on the Supreme Court, died several months before the 2016 election. Fellow Justice Alito indicated the reverence that conservative justices had for Scalia’s reasoning when he commented that they would ask “What would Scalia do?”
Stephen Breyer, another Associate Justice on the Court who retired in 2022, often held public debates with Scalia. In his book Reading the Constitution: Why I Chose Pragmatism, Not Textualism, Breyer recalls the irresolvable issues between the two justices. Breyer placed greater weight on the purpose of a law. Scalia emphasized the statutory text of a law and the “text’s original public meaning” (p. 28), a sub-branch of textualism called originalism. Sometimes a strict textualist approach conflicts with or contradicts an originalist approach. Richard Epstein (2014, p. 54) cautioned, “it is a dangerous mistake to conflate any form of originalism which asks how texts were understood when written, with strict textualism, which ignores those necessary but implied exceptions.”
Breyer (p. 25) writes that Scalia thought the textualist approach would create what Scalia himself called a “science of statutory interpretation.” In the 19th century, Jeremy Bentham, a founder of an influential philosophy called utilitarianism, wanted to become the “Newton of morals.” Bentham invented a “felicific calculus” to bring scientific and objective analysis to moral and ethical controversies. The calculus focused on the effect of an action, not its nature or the parties involved. Bentham’s goal was to design a system of moral reasoning that would make judicial sentences proportionate to the effect of a crime. A stolen chicken was a stolen chicken. It didn’t matter who was the owner of the chicken. Novel in its approach at the time, it has become the foundation of law, ethics and economics but the calculus itself seems rather quaint to students who are introduced to it in an ethics class. Like Bentham, Scalia wanted to develop a set of rules of judicial interpretation that would guide the drafting of statutes in Congress. Unfortunately, the Court’s textualist reasoning has created confusion in the lower courts.
Some of the confusion arises from the inconsistent application of textualist methods by the conservative justices. In the District of Columbia v Heller majority opinion authored by Scalia, he disregarded the first half of the text of the Second Amendment. The Amendment had been written to assure the state legislatures that the new federal government could not call up state militias, then collect their muskets and disband the militia, leaving states powerless against an autocratic federal government. In his majority opinion, Scalia dismissed the first half of the text as a prefatory clause imposing no limit on the meaning of the second half of the amendment’s text. That decision highlights the difficulty, if not impossibility, of being objective in legal or moral reasoning.
Ethicists have long grappled with a grounding problem, establishing a moral foundation for ethical evaluation. The folks at Crash Course Philosophy have an informative video. (I set the playback speed to .75 to digest all the points they present). In ancient Greece, Socrates asked Euthyphro if the gods loved the pious because it was pious, or was something pious simply because the gods loved it. Twenty-five hundred years later, ethicists and jurists have not resolved this question, known as the Euthyphro dilemma. Is something inherently just or right, or do we simply make it so? Neither Scalia nor Bentham could escape the inherent self-centeredness of our perceptions. In Einstein’s terms of space-time, we are like the sun that bends the space around it. We bend the information that we receive so that it is difficult to find any objective agreement among human beings that will persist across time and culture.
The subjectivity of our perceptions can defeat any methodology in search of an unambiguous objectivity. I will pick a case from the Court’s current term to illustrate how textualist analysis can reach very different conclusions. Snyder v United States was a case testing the distinction between bribery and gratuity. James Snyder was a former mayor of Portage, Indiana who was charged and convicted of violating a federal law for a payment he received following the award of a contract for the purchase of some garbage trucks. Snyder was charged under §666 (the curlicue symbol denotes “paragraph”) of Title 18 of the U.S. Code:
“corruptly solicits or demands for the benefit of any person, or accepts or agrees to accept, anything of value from any person, intending to be influenced or rewarded in connection with any business, transaction, or series of transactions of such organization, government, or agency involving any thing of value of $5,000or more.” §666(a)(1)(B).
Snyder argued that he did agree to any payment before the transaction and that §666 applied only to bribes. Writing for the majority opinion of six conservative justices, Justice Kavanaugh distinguished between bribery, a payment before an act, and a gratuity, a payment after an act:
either (i) a reward given after the act with no agreement beforehand (gratuity)
or (ii) a reward given after the act pursuant to an agreement beforehand (bribe).
Although Kavanaugh distinguishes the two, why did Congress expand the scope of the law by including “or rewarded?” If they meant that §666 of the statute to apply only to bribery, they could have left the text unmodified. The addition to the text indicated to the dissenting three justices that Congress intended the amended text to apply to payments before and after the fact. However, a strict textualist approach ignores legislative history. Kavanaugh justified his reasoning because of the placement of an adverb “corruptly” in the statute. Kavanaugh looked to §201(b) covering bribery and §201(c) of the statute governing gratuities and found that only §201(b) used the word. Therefore, Kavanaugh reasoned, the use of “corruptly” in §666 limits its application only to bribery.
The bribery statute for federal officials, §201(b), uses
the term “corruptly.” But the gratuities statute for federal
officials, §201(c), does not. The term “corruptly” therefore
signals that [18 U.S.C.] §666 is a bribery statute. And statutory
history, statutory structure, statutory punishments,
federalism, and fair notice strongly reinforce that textual
signal and together establish that §666 is a bribery statute.
Writing the dissenting opinion, Justice Jackson wrote, “To reach the right conclusion we need not march through various auxiliary analyses: We can begin—and end—with only the text.” Justice Jackson referred to a separate §215 that targeted bank employees who accepted bribes and gratuities. That section of the text was used as a model for the language in §666, according to the House Reports of Congress at the time, and §666 duplicates the wording of §215. The majority opinion disregarded that salient fact.
At the heart of this controversy and others is the conservative dislike of federal interference in state affairs, a breach of federalism, mentioned twelve times in Kavanaugh’s opinion. Here is one example: “Interpreting §666 as a gratuities statute would significantly infringe on bedrock federalism principles.”
Congress awards federal money to states for various purposes, but local officials complete the transactions with national and local companies. It is perfectly understandable that Congress did not want local officials to profit from the disbursement of federal funds. However, Congress effectively made all jurisdictions subject to the law, expanding the scope of federal regulatory power. The federalism principle is nowhere in either the Constitution or the relevant statute but captures the idea of boundaries and separation of powers implied in the Constitution. Given that aversion to an expansion of power, a skilled jurist can use textualist analysis to serve whatever purpose they want.
A recurring theme in former Justice Breyer’s book is that textual analysis is as arbitrary as the traditional analysis it was meant to replace, an analysis guided by the purpose of a piece of legislation. Scalia thought that textualist interpretation would produce a set of rules that would guide legislators as they wrote the law. Out of all the justices on the Court, only Stephen Breyer had worked for a time in a legislative function, serving as counsel on Senator Edward Kennedy’s staff. Scalia knew little of the negotiations and deliberate obfuscations that legislators employ to build a consensus to pass a law. The ambiguity in statutory text is deliberate in some cases. Just as with the executive and legislative branches, justices have points of view, and they use their talents and experience to reinforce their perspective. Don’t be fooled by the black robes. There are human beings beneath the cloth.
These past weeks I have explored some aspects of the law as they relate to expectations. Because I am not a lawyer or a constitutional scholar, the research for these topics requires more time. I hope that readers have learned a bit as I expanded my own knowledge of these topics. I apologize in advance for any faults or omissions. Next week, I intend to turn to several topics on investment, the tradeoff between our current self and our future self when we delay consumption and save money.
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Photo by Gene Gallin on Unsplash
Keywords: ethics, utilitarianism, bribery, gratuity, textualism, originalism
Breyer, S. G. (2024). Reading the constitution: Why I chose pragmatism, not textualism. Simon & Schuster.
Epstein, Richard Allen. (2014). The classical liberal constitution: The uncertain quest for limited government. Harvard University Press.