在政府非当事人的民事诉讼中成功主张国家秘密特权的影响:被告何时应承担政府成功主张国家秘密特权的责任?

E. Imwinkelried
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引用次数: 0

摘要

众所周知,国家政府拥有保护国家和军事机密的证据特权。这项特权保护的是对国家安全和生存至关重要的信息。911事件后,国家政府开始更频繁地行使这一特权,这是可以预料的。政府在几起起诉恐怖分子嫌疑人的案件中援引了这一特权。然而,这项特权也适用于民事诉讼。事实上,即使政府没有作为当事人参与,政府也可以在民事诉讼中主张这一特权。政府有权为了要求特权而进行干预。近年来,政府在大量民事诉讼中主张了这一特权,包括涉及高科技公司、私人保安公司、基础设施承包商以及武器和飞机制造商的案件。当政府在非当事人的民事诉讼中成功主张特权时,问题自然出现了:主张的程序效果是什么?正如本文开头的引文所表明的那样,一般认为,唯一的影响是特权信息无法作为证据,案件可以在没有特权证据的情况下继续进行。然而,本文的第1部分表明,这种概括是一种过度简化。在许多情况下,法院终止诉讼,导致辩方的绝对胜利。原告失去了进行发现或将案件提交审判的机会。本文的第二部分对法律的现状进行了批判性的评价。第二部分的主要主旨是,至少在一种情况下,原告应该被允许进行诉讼——即,当(1)原告有足够的非特权证据来提出初步证据案件,(2)诉讼不会增加无意中泄露特权信息的重大风险,(3)特权要求影响辩方进行积极辩护的能力,(4)被告与政府的关系比原告更密切。事实性命题被认为是积极抗辩,因为法律赋予被告对该命题进行辩护、陈述和证明的责任。这些责任分配给被告可以决定结果。如果有足够重要的政策将这些责任分配给被告,在这些情况下,被告也应该承担特权证据损失的责任。政府的特权主张既没有消灭也没有减少最初保证将责任分配给辩方的政策。第二部分补充说,当政府的主张干扰了被告提出简单辩护的能力,仅仅是否定原告案件的一个要素时,原告也应该被允许进行诉讼。第二部分强调,虽然在这些例外情况下应该允许原告进行诉讼,但法院不应该给予原告在政府提出索赔后通常获得的那种强制性胜利。即使原告继续诉讼,也不能确定会有原告的判决。一个关键的原告证人可能无法出庭,一个紧张的证人可能会忘记对原告案件至关重要的信息,或者证人可能会表现出消极的态度,导致陪审团不相信证人的证词。因此,法官既不能为原告作出即决判决,也不能作出有利于原告的判决。然而,本文的论点是,在这些案件中,法律应该进行改革,以给予原告诉讼和公平赢得判决的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Effect of the Successful Assertion of the State Secrets Privilege in a Civil Lawsuit in Which the Government is Not a Party: When, If Ever, Should the Defendant Shoulder the Burden of the Government’s Successful Privilege Claim?
It is well-settled that the national government has an evidentiary privilege protecting state and military secrets. The privilege protects information that can be vital to the country’s safety and survival. It was expectable that the national government would begin asserting the privilege more frequently after 9/11. The government has invoked the privilege in several prosecutions of alleged terrorists. However, the privilege also applies in civil actions. Indeed, the government may assert the privilege in a civil action even when the government is not joined as a party. The government has the right to intervene for the purpose of claiming the privilege. In recent years, the government has asserted the privilege in a large number of civil actions, including cases involving high technology companies, private security firms, infrastructure contractors, and weapons and aircraft manufacturers. When the government successfully asserts the privilege in a civil action in which it is not a party, the question naturally arises: What is the procedural effect of the assertion? As the quotations at the beginning of this article indicate, the generalization has been that the only effects are that the privileged information becomes unavailable as evidence and that the case can proceed without the privileged evidence. However, Part I of this article demonstrates that that generalization is a gross over-simplification. In many cases, the court terminates the litigation, resulting in a peremptory victory for the defense. The plaintiff loses the opportunity to conduct discovery or take the case to trial. Part II of this article presents a critical evaluation of the current state of the law. The primary thrust of Part II is that at least in one set of circumstances, the plaintiff ought to be permitted to proceed – namely, when (1) the plaintiff has sufficient unprivileged evidence to present a prima facie case, (2) proceeding would not raise a significant risk of the inadvertent revelation of privileged information, (3) the privilege claim affects the defense’s ability to develop an affirmative defense, and (4) the defendant has a closer relationship to the government than the plaintiff. A factual proposition is considered an affirmative defense because the law assigns the defendant the burdens of pleading, production, and proof on the proposition. The allocation of these burdens to the defendant can be outcome determinative. If there were sufficiently weighty policies to assign those burdens to the defendant, in these circumstances the defendant should also bear the burden of the loss of the privileged evidence. The government’s privilege claim neither extinguishes nor diminishes the policies that originally warranted assigning the burdens to the defense. Part II adds that there is a colorable argument that the plaintiff should also be permitted to proceed when the government claim interferes with the defendant’s ability to present a simple defense, merely negating an element of the plaintiff’s case. Part II emphasizes that although the plaintiff should be permitted to proceed in these exceptional cases, the court should not grant the plaintiff the sort of peremptory victory that the defense usually obtains after the government’s claim. Even when the plaintiff proceeds, it is not a foregone conclusion that there will be a plaintiff’s verdict. A key plaintiff’s witness may become unavailable for trial, a nervous witness might forget information critical to the plaintiff’s case, or the witness may display negative demeanor that prompts the jury to disbelieve the witness’s testimony. Hence, the judge should neither enter summary judgment for the plaintiff nor direct a verdict in the plaintiff’s favor. However, the thesis of this article is that in these cases the law should be reformed to accord the plaintiff an opportunity to proceed and fairly win a verdict.
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