The “Cruel and Unusual” Legacy of the Star Chamber

Donald A. Dripps
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Abstract

Supreme Court justices have read the “cruel and unusual pun-ishments” clause as prohibiting torturous methods of punishment, prohibiting grossly disproportionate punishments, and/or prohibit-ing arbitrary discretion over the infliction of the death penalty. All three accounts face familiar and formidable historical challenges. There is general agreement that the founders took the clause from Article 10 of the English Bill of Rights, and that Article 10 repudi-ated the sentence passed on Titus Oates by the infamous Judge Jef-freys in 1685. Yet, although the methods of punishment inflicted on Oates—two days of horrific flogging, recurring stands in the pillory, and life imprisonment—were horrific, they were not capi-tal, were not unusual in 1685, and were all included in the Crimes Act passed by the First U.S. Congress in 1790. None of the major interpretations of “cruel and unusual punishment” accounts for this puzzling aspect of the aftermath of the Oates case. Nor do they ex-plain the adoption of the Eighth Amendment, which primarily re-sponded to Anti-Federalist fears that Congress might adopt tor-turous methods of capital punishment. Prevailing theories fail to account for the disconnect between what the English provision did and what the American provision meant to do. This Article argues that prevailing accounts are breathtakingly incomplete. The full story begins not with the flogging of Titus Oates in 1685, but with the abolition of the Star Chamber in 1641. Sen-tencing Oates, Jeffreys claimed for King’s Bench all the Star Chamber’s lawless power to determine punishments less than capi-tal. The English Article 10 repudiated this attempt to resurrect the Star Chamber. Then Congress, responding to Anti-Federalist fears about Congress adopting European-style executions by torture, freighted the “cruel and unusual” language with two additional meanings. The clause now applied to capital, as well as noncapital, penalties. It now also restricted legislative as well as judicial discre-tion. Synthesizing the English original and the later concerns of the American founders, the Eighth Amendment forbids lawless dis-cretion in both capital and noncapital cases, and torturous methods of punishment. Proportionality was left to the legislature, subject to the powerful check provided by a constitutional requirement of even-handed enforcement. At a time when the Court is reconsidering longstanding prece-dents from originalist premises, this account is not only a major advance in the academic literature. It may also be, practically speaking, a matter of life and death.
星室“残酷而不寻常”的遗产
最高法院法官将“残酷和不寻常的惩罚”条款解读为禁止酷刑惩罚方法,禁止严重不成比例的惩罚,和/或禁止任意裁量判处死刑。这三种说法都面临着熟悉而艰巨的历史挑战。人们普遍认为,开国元勋们从英国《权利法案》第10条中吸取了这一条款,第10条否定了1685年臭名昭著的杰夫·弗雷斯法官对提图斯·奥茨的判决。然而,尽管对奥茨的惩罚方法——两天可怕的鞭刑、反复出现的颈柱刑和终身监禁——是可怕的,但它们不是死刑,在1685年并不罕见,而且都被列入了1790年第一届美国国会通过的《犯罪法案》。关于“残酷和不寻常的惩罚”的主要解释都没有解释奥茨案的后果中令人困惑的一面。他们也没有解释第八修正案的通过,该修正案主要是为了回应反联邦党人对国会可能采用不公正的死刑方法的担忧。流行的理论无法解释英国条款所做的和美国条款所要做的之间的脱节。本文认为,流行的说法是惊人的不完整。整个故事并非始于1685年对提图斯·奥茨的鞭笞,而是始于1641年废除星室。在对奥茨的判决中,杰弗里斯声称国王的法官席拥有所有星际法庭的无法无天的权力,可以决定死刑以下的惩罚。英国的第10条否定了这种复活星室的企图。后来,国会为了回应反联邦党人对国会采用欧洲式酷刑处决的担忧,将“残忍而不寻常”的语言附加了两层含义。该条款现在既适用于死刑,也适用于非死刑处罚。它现在也限制了立法和司法的自由裁量权。《第八修正案》综合了英语原文和美国开国元勋们后来的关切,禁止在死刑和非死刑案件中不受法律约束的自由裁量权,禁止使用折磨人的惩罚方法。比例问题留给了立法机关,并受到宪法要求的公正执法所提供的有力检查。在最高法院重新考虑从原旨主义前提出发的长期先例的时候,这种说法不仅是学术文献的重大进步。实际上,这也可能是一个生死攸关的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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