Reviving the Excessive Fines Clause

Beth A. Colgan
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Millions of American adults and children struggle with debt stemming from economic sanctions issued by the criminal and juvenile courts. For those unable to pay, the consequences — including incarceration, exclusion from public benefits, and persistent poverty — can be draconian and perpetual. The Supreme Court has nevertheless concluded that many of these concerns lie outside the scope of the Eighth Amendment’s Excessive Fines Clause. In interpreting the Clause, the Court relied upon a limited set of historical sources to restrict “fines” to sanctions that are punitive in nature and paid exclusively to the government, and to define “excessive” as referring to — either exclusively or primarily — the proportionality between the crime’s gravity and the amount of the fine.This Article takes the Court at its word by assuming history is constitutionally relevant, but it challenges the Court’s limited use of history by providing the first detailed analysis of colonial and early American statutory and court records regarding fines. This robust historical analysis belies the Court’s use of history to announce historical “truths” to limit the scope of the Clause, by showing significant evidence that contradicts those limitations. The Article uses the historical record to identify questions regarding the Clause’s meaning, to assess the quality of the historical evidence suggesting an answer to such questions, and then to consider that evidence — according to its value — within a debate that incorporates contemporary understandings of just punishment. Under the resulting interpretation, the historical evidence articulated in this Article would support an understanding of a “fine" as a deprivation of anything of economic value in response to a public offense. “Excessive,” in turn, would be assessed through a broad understanding of proportionality that takes account of both offense and offender characteristics, as well as the effect of the fine on the individual. The proposed interpretation more faithfully reflects the history and its limitations, and broadens the Clause’s scope to provide greater individual protections.
恢复超额罚款条款
数以百万计的美国成年人和儿童因刑事和少年法庭的经济制裁而负债累累。对于那些无力支付的人来说,其后果——包括监禁、被排除在公共福利之外以及持续贫困——可能是严酷而永久性的。然而,最高法院的结论是,这些问题中的许多都不在《第八修正案》的超额罚款条款的范围之内。在解释该条款时,法院依靠一组有限的历史资料,将“罚款”限制为具有惩罚性质的制裁,只支付给政府,并将“过度”定义为-完全或主要-指犯罪的严重程度与罚款数额之间的比例。这篇文章通过假设历史与宪法相关而采纳了最高法院的说法,但它通过首次详细分析殖民地和早期美国有关罚款的法定和法院记录,挑战了最高法院对历史的有限利用。这种强有力的历史分析掩盖了最高法院利用历史来宣布历史“真相”,通过展示与这些限制相矛盾的重要证据来限制该条款的范围。本文使用历史记录来确定有关该条款含义的问题,评估提出此类问题答案的历史证据的质量,然后根据其价值在结合当代对公正惩罚的理解的辩论中考虑这些证据。根据由此产生的解释,本条所阐述的历史证据将支持对“罚款”的理解,即作为对公共犯罪的回应,剥夺任何具有经济价值的东西。“过度”,反过来,将通过对比例的广泛理解来评估,考虑到犯罪和罪犯的特征,以及罚款对个人的影响。拟议的解释更忠实地反映了该条款的历史及其局限性,并扩大了该条款的范围,以提供更大的个人保护。
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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