联邦法院法律理论的修正:管辖权下产生的案例

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW
S. Grossi
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In addition, Gunn provides insight into the ongoing clash between principle and docket-management concerns that has become so characteristic of Supreme Court decisions in the realm of procedure.The Gunn opinion was much anticipated by the legal community since prior decisions by the Court had generated considerable confusion as to the scope of arising under jurisdiction in so-called “federal-ingredient” cases. Some commentators hoped that the Court would adopt the creation test as the exclusive measure of jurisdiction. Others hoped for a clarification of the federal-ingredient test. Still others, like this author, hoped that the Court would redirect the jurisdictional analysis to the traditional fundamental principles that once animated federal question jurisdiction. As I explain in my article, everyone will be disappointed by the result. The specific jurisdictional issue in Gunn focused on what had come to be known as the third and fourth prongs of the “Grable test,” namely, whether the federal ingredient embedded in the plaintiff’s state-law claim was substantial and whether the exercise of jurisdiction over that claim would upset the congressionally mandated balance between federal and state courts. Lower courts had been struggling with the interpretation and application of both prongs. Some had adopted detailed and highly technical doctrinal tests that led to counterintuitive results where jurisdiction was denied over concededly “significant” federal questions. Others had adopted a more holistic approach, seemingly designed to apply Grable test and, at the same time, avoid that test’s obvious strictures.Some lower courts actually confessed that the jurisdictional determination was subjective and speculative and that, under similar circumstances, different judges might reach different conclusions. While the Gunn Court did address both Grable prongs, it did little other than endorse its previous iterations of those elements, providing neither a defense for them nor a principled method through which they might be applied. Thus, much of the confusion over federal jurisdictional standards that preceded Gunn remains largely unresolved.In this article, I begin by assessing the development of statutory arising under jurisdiction from its nineteenth century roots to the Court’s most recent decisions. Here I examine the fundamental-principles compass that was developed by the Court in foundational arising-under cases, and synthesized succinctly by Justice Cardozo in Gully v. First Nat. Bank in Meridian. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

2013年2月20日,最高法院宣布了Gunn v. Minton一案的判决。在一宗以先前的专利诉讼中涉嫌律师错误为前提的法律渎职诉讼中,法院重新审视了法定“在”管辖权下产生的范围。这一决定的意义超越了它产生的具体背景。尽管Gunn案涉及在管辖权下产生的专利法,《美国法典》第28编第1338条,但该管辖权标准与第1331条措辞相同的标准应以完全相同的方式解释。因此,冈恩案的判决适用于所有联邦问题案件,在这些案件中,联邦问题包含在州法主张中。此外,Gunn对原则和案单管理之间的持续冲突提供了深刻的见解,这种冲突已成为最高法院在程序领域的判决的特征。法律界很期待Gunn的意见,因为法院以前的决定对所谓“联邦成分”案件的管辖范围造成了相当大的混乱。有些评论人士希望法院采用创造检验作为司法管辖权的唯一衡量标准。其他人则希望联邦成分测试能得到澄清。还有一些人,如本作者,希望法院将管辖权分析转向曾经推动联邦问题管辖权的传统基本原则。正如我在文章中所解释的那样,每个人都会对结果感到失望。冈恩案中具体的管辖权问题集中在被称为“格拉布尔检验”的第三和第四个方面,即,原告的州法索赔中包含的联邦成分是否实质性,以及对该索赔行使管辖权是否会打破国会规定的联邦法院和州法院之间的平衡。下级法院一直在努力解释和适用这两方面。有些州采用了详细和高度技术性的理论检验,导致违反直觉的结果,即否认对公认的"重大"联邦问题的管辖权。其他人则采用了一种更全面的方法,似乎是为了应用格拉布尔测试而设计的,同时避免了该测试明显的局限性。一些下级法院实际上承认管辖权的确定是主观的和推测性的,在类似的情况下,不同的法官可能得出不同的结论。虽然Gunn法院确实处理了Grable的这两个方面,但它除了支持之前对这些要素的迭代之外,几乎没有做什么,既没有为这些要素提供辩护,也没有提供适用这些要素的原则方法。因此,在冈恩案之前,关于联邦司法标准的许多困惑在很大程度上仍未得到解决。在本文中,我首先评估了管辖权下产生的成文法的发展,从其19世纪的根源到法院最近的判决。在这里,我将考察由最高法院在基础诉讼案件中发展起来的基本原则指南针,并由大法官卡多佐(Cardozo)在Meridian的Gully v. First Nat Bank一案中简洁地综合。在该案中,最高法院认可了一种统一的管辖权理论,该理论侧重于联邦问题在案件中的作用,询问案件是否真正涉及联邦法律,因为如果案件确实涉及联邦法律,管辖权的行使将与国会为联邦问题案件提供论坛的意图内在地一致。以这一基本原则模型为基础,我接着考察了最近出现的案例,并表明,从20世纪80年代开始,指南针迷失了方向,取而代之的是一堆越来越复杂的理论测试,与逻辑和成熟的司法原则脱节。在这里,焦点从争议的联邦性质转移到一种政策驱动的模式,这种模式严重偏重于案件管理问题。冈恩为最高法院提供了一个重新获得指南针的机会,或者,至少,提供一个可理解的地图,帮助下级联邦法院在司法创造的迷宫中导航。但是,本院错过了这个机会。相反,最高法院继续沿着一条偏离管辖权基本原则的曲折的理论道路前进,其结果往往与国会规定的为解释和适用联邦法律原则提供一个联邦论坛的目标不符。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Modified Theory of the Law of Federal Courts: The Case of Arising under Jurisdiction
On February 20, 2013, the Supreme Court announced its decision in Gunn v. Minton. There the Court revisited the scope of statutory “arising under” jurisdiction in the context of a legal malpractice suit premised on alleged attorney errors committed in a prior patent litigation. The significance of the decision transcends the specific context in which it arose. Although Gunn involved patent law arising under jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. §1338, that jurisdictional standard is interpreted in precisely the same manner as the identically worded §1331 standard. Hence, the decision in Gunn applies to a full range of federal question cases in which a federal issue is embedded in a state-law claim. In addition, Gunn provides insight into the ongoing clash between principle and docket-management concerns that has become so characteristic of Supreme Court decisions in the realm of procedure.The Gunn opinion was much anticipated by the legal community since prior decisions by the Court had generated considerable confusion as to the scope of arising under jurisdiction in so-called “federal-ingredient” cases. Some commentators hoped that the Court would adopt the creation test as the exclusive measure of jurisdiction. Others hoped for a clarification of the federal-ingredient test. Still others, like this author, hoped that the Court would redirect the jurisdictional analysis to the traditional fundamental principles that once animated federal question jurisdiction. As I explain in my article, everyone will be disappointed by the result. The specific jurisdictional issue in Gunn focused on what had come to be known as the third and fourth prongs of the “Grable test,” namely, whether the federal ingredient embedded in the plaintiff’s state-law claim was substantial and whether the exercise of jurisdiction over that claim would upset the congressionally mandated balance between federal and state courts. Lower courts had been struggling with the interpretation and application of both prongs. Some had adopted detailed and highly technical doctrinal tests that led to counterintuitive results where jurisdiction was denied over concededly “significant” federal questions. Others had adopted a more holistic approach, seemingly designed to apply Grable test and, at the same time, avoid that test’s obvious strictures.Some lower courts actually confessed that the jurisdictional determination was subjective and speculative and that, under similar circumstances, different judges might reach different conclusions. While the Gunn Court did address both Grable prongs, it did little other than endorse its previous iterations of those elements, providing neither a defense for them nor a principled method through which they might be applied. Thus, much of the confusion over federal jurisdictional standards that preceded Gunn remains largely unresolved.In this article, I begin by assessing the development of statutory arising under jurisdiction from its nineteenth century roots to the Court’s most recent decisions. Here I examine the fundamental-principles compass that was developed by the Court in foundational arising-under cases, and synthesized succinctly by Justice Cardozo in Gully v. First Nat. Bank in Meridian. There the Court endorsed a unified jurisdictional theory that focused on the role of the federal issue in the case, asking whether the case was truly about federal law, for if the case was truly about federal law, the exercise of jurisdiction would be inherently consistent with congressional intent to provide a forum for federal question cases.With this fundamental-principles model as my foundation, I then examine more recent arising-under cases and show that, beginning in the 1980s, the compass got lost and was replaced by a maze of increasingly complex doctrinal tests disconnected from logical and well-established jurisdictional principles. Here the focus shifted from the federal nature of the controversy to a policy-driven model weighted heavily toward case-management concerns.Gunn offered the Supreme Court an opportunity to recapture the compass or, at the very least, to provide a comprehensible map that would assist lower federal courts in navigating the judicially created maze. The Court, however, missed that opportunity. Instead, the Court continued along a meandering doctrinal path that diverges from the fundamental principles of jurisdiction and often leads to results inconsistent with the congressionally mandated goal of providing a federal forum for the interpretation and application of the principles of federal law.
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期刊介绍: Washington Law Review is a student-run and student-edited scholarly legal journal at the University of Washington School of Law. Inaugurated in 1919, it is the first legal journal published in the Pacific Northwest. Today, the Law Review publishes Articles and Comments of national and regional interest four times per year.
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