清晰如泥:未发表意见的不确定判例地位如何混淆了合格豁免的确定

David R. Cleveland
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引用次数: 1

摘要

否认未发表意见的先例地位,使本已不明确的有关有条件豁免的法律更加混乱。政府官员可主张有条件的豁免,作为对其侵犯公民权利的主张的辩护。检验的标准是他们是否违反了“明确确立的法律”。联邦巡回法院对于是否可以使用未发表的意见来确定明确确立的法律存在分歧。这篇题为《清晰如泥:未发表意见的不确定判例地位如何混淆了合格豁免裁决》的文章认为,未发表意见是确定何种法律已明确成立的理想来源。本文审查了针对政府官员的民事权利诉讼的目的以及这些官员可获得的有条件豁免辩护。本文还分析了未发表意见的特点,并从定义上发现它们是帮助确定明确确立的法律的理想来源。然后,审查了巡回法院在其有条件豁免分析中使用未发表意见的差异。最后,本文提出了通过法理或规则制定手段解决这一问题的途径。作为未发表意见发布的,按照定义是明确确立的法律;根据联邦巡回法院的规定,制定新法律或扩大或缩小现有法律的意见必须公布。否认未发表意见的先例地位,将这些意见降为第二类地位,这是不合理和违宪的,但也混淆了它们证明明确确立的法律的固有适用性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Clear as Mud: How the Uncertain Precedential Status of Unpublished Opinions Muddles Qualified Immunity Determinations
Denying precedential status to unpublished opinions muddles the already unclear law surrounding qualified immunity. Government officials may claim qualified immunity as a defense to claims that they have violated a person’s civil rights. The test is whether they have violated “clearly established law.” The federal circuits differ on whether unpublished opinions may be used in determining clearly established law. This article, Clear as Mud: How the Uncertain Precedential Status of Unpublished Opinions Muddles Qualified Immunity Determinations, argues that unpublished opinions are ideal sources for determining what law is clearly established. The article reviews the purpose of both civil rights actions against government officials and the qualified immunity defense available to such officials. It also analyzes the characteristics of unpublished opinions and finds them, by definition, to be ideal sources to help determine the clearly established law. It then examines the circuit courts’ variation in the use of unpublished opinions in their qualified immunity analyses. Finally, it proposes a resolution to this problematic circuit split through jurisprudential or rulemaking means. Opinions that are issued as unpublished are by definition clearly established law; opinions that make new law or expand or contract existing law must be published under the federal circuit rules. Denying precedential status to unpublished opinions has relegated these opinions to a second class status, which is unjustified and unconstitutional, but also obfuscates their inherent suitability to demonstrate clearly established law.
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