Equitable Balancing in the Age of Statutes

J. Goldstein
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Equitable Balancing in the Age of Statutes examines the application of the doctrine of equitable balancing in determining whether to issue injunctions for violations of federal statutes. For the past several decades, the Supreme Court has held that the decision whether to enjoin violations of federal laws ordinarily should be determined by “balancing the equities,” in which courts weigh the hardship that the plaintiffs would face if an injunction were denied against the hardship the defendants would face if an injunction were granted. The Court has justified the doctrine by declaring that it is a longstanding equitable practice dating back centuries, perhaps since time immemorial. The Court most recently applied the doctrine in Winter v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 129 S.Ct. 365 (2008), in which environmentalists sought to enjoin the Navy from conducting antisubmarine training exercises using a type of sonar system alleged to be harmful to whales. The Court held that, even if the Navy was acting in violation of federal law, no injunction should be issued because, as the Court saw the balance of equities, national security trumps environmental protection. The Article argues that the Supreme Court’s experiment in applying equitable balancing in statutory contexts should be abandoned because it conflicts with separation-of-powers principles. The Article seeks to debunk the Court’s premise for applying equitable balancing in statutory cases - that the doctrine has been part of equitable practice for many centuries. In fact, equitable balancing is a relatively modern phenomenon, which first appeared in state common law cases during the period of rapid industrialization following the Civil War, and it only gained general acceptance in the 1930s. It was adopted for the express purpose of expanding judicial discretion to protect industries against injunctions in nuisance actions to stop air and water pollution. History is repeating itself because the Supreme Court adopted equitable balancing in federal statutory cases, beginning in 1982, to expand judicial discretion to excuse violations of federal statutes when, in the courts’ judgment, countervailing policy interests outweigh the interests served by federal statutes. Once equitable balancing is recognized as a recent phenomenon adopted to enlarge judicial policymaking authority, it becomes apparent that applying the doctrine in federal statutory cases raises substantial unresolved separation-of-powers problems. Among other things, the doctrine allows, if not requires, that courts make ad -hoc assessments of the relative importance of apparently conflicting statutory policies.
成文法时代的公平平衡
《成文法时代的公平平衡》探讨了公平平衡原则在决定是否对违反联邦成文法的行为发布禁令方面的应用。在过去的几十年里,最高法院一直认为,是否禁止违反联邦法律的行为通常应由“平衡公平”来决定,即法院权衡如果禁制令被驳回,原告将面临的困难与如果禁制令被批准,被告将面临的困难。最高法院为这一原则辩护的理由是,它是一种可以追溯到几个世纪以前的长期公平做法,或许可以追溯到远古时代。最高法院最近在Winter诉自然资源保护委员会案(129 s.c.)中应用了这一原则。365(2008),其中环保主义者试图禁止海军使用一种据称对鲸鱼有害的声纳系统进行反潜训练。法院认为,即使海军的行为违反了联邦法律,也不应该发布禁令,因为正如法院所看到的公平平衡,国家安全高于环境保护。文章认为,应放弃最高法院在法定背景下适用公平平衡的实验,因为它与三权分立原则相冲突。该条试图揭穿法院在法定案件中适用衡平法平衡的前提,即该原则在许多世纪以来一直是衡平法实践的一部分。事实上,衡平法平衡是一个比较现代的现象,它最早出现在内战后快速工业化时期的州普通法案例中,直到20世纪30年代才得到普遍接受。通过该法案的明确目的是扩大司法自由裁量权,以保护工业免受为制止空气和水污染而采取的滋扰行动的禁令。历史正在重演,因为从1982年开始,最高法院在联邦法定案件中采用了公平平衡,以扩大司法自由裁量权,在法院判决中,当反补贴政策利益超过联邦法规所服务的利益时,可以原谅违反联邦法规的行为。一旦公平平衡被认为是扩大司法决策权力的一种新现象,那么在联邦法定案件中应用这一原则显然会引起大量尚未解决的三权分立问题。除其他事项外,该原则允许(如果不是要求的话)法院对明显冲突的法定政策的相对重要性进行特别评估。
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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