赔偿和超额罚款条款

Q4 Social Sciences
Kevin Bennardo
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引用次数: 3

摘要

赔偿是许多刑事判决的一个组成部分。然而,对于宪法第八修正案是否以及如何限制刑事案件中的赔偿令,几乎没有达成一致意见。长期以来,法院对过度罚款条款是否适用于赔偿令、是否对赔偿令适用“严重不成比例”检验或其他基于因果关系的检验,以及如何衡量赔偿情况下的严重不成比例,一直存在分歧。首先,第八修正案的超额罚款条款应被理解为对刑事案件中的赔偿令的限制。第八修正案适用,因为这些货币支付部分是惩罚性的。而且,虽然赔偿款项不是向主权支付的,但为“超额罚款条款”的目的,“罚款”的概念应恰当地理解为包括因政府发起的行动而向第三方支付的款项。第二,适用于刑事罚款和没收的“严重不成比例”检验也应适用于赔偿令。事实上,所有的货币制裁应该集中在一起,以便进行单一的“超额罚款条款”比例分析。与宪法有关的问题应该是,对违法者的全部金钱制裁是否与罪行的严重程度严重不成比例。虽然犯罪行为与受害人损失之间的因果关系通常是赔偿令的法定要求,但它不是宪法要求。因果关系要件进一步促进了赔偿的救济目的;它与第八修正案的过度调查无关,该调查的功能是限制货币制裁的惩罚性严重程度。最后,严重不成比例的问题在很大程度上是一种判断,应该留给司法部门。一些法院在评价处罚是否合宪性时,不恰当地完全依赖于分析货币制裁是否得到立法机关的授权。这种做法不恰当地将宪法调查瓦解为法定调查。虽然法定赔偿或罚款范围可能是宪制分析中有用的输入,但它不能是唯一的组成部分。最后,必须信任司法机构的独立判断,以衡量相称性,并发现违宪的过度货币制裁。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Restitution and the Excessive Fines Clause
Restitution is a component of many criminal sentences. There is little agreement, however, upon whether and how the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution limits restitution orders in criminal cases. Courts have long been divided over whether the Excessive Fines Clause applies to restitution orders at all, whether to apply the “grossly disproportional” test to restitution orders or some other causation-based test, and how to measure gross disproportionality in the restitution context. First, the Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment should be read as a limit on restitution orders in criminal cases. The Eighth Amendment applies because these monetary payments are partially punitive. And, although restitution payments are not made to the sovereign, the concept of “fines” for purposes of the Excessive Fines Clause is properly understood to encompass payments to third parties that result from government-initiated action. Second, the same “grossly disproportional” test that has been applied to criminal fines and forfeitures should apply to restitution orders as well. Indeed, all monetary sanctions should be pooled together for purposes of a single Excessive Fines Clause proportionality analysis. The constitutionally-relevant question should be whether an offender’s total monetary sanction is grossly disproportional to the gravity of the offense. Although causation between the offense conduct and the victim’s loss is generally a statutory requirement of restitution orders, it is not a constitutional one. The causation requirement furthers restitution’s remedial purpose; it is not relevant to the Eighth Amendment’s excessiveness inquiry, which functions to limit the punitive severity of monetary sanctions. Lastly, the question of gross disproportionality is largely an exercise of judgment that should be left to the judiciary. Some courts have inappropriately wholly relied on analyzing whether the monetary sanction was authorized by the legislature in assessing the constitutionality of the penalty. This approach inappropriately collapses the constitutional inquiry into the statutory one. Although the statutory restitution or fine range may be a useful input in the constitutional analysis, it cannot be the sole component. In the end, the judiciary's independent judgment must be trusted to weigh proportionality and detect unconstitutionally excessive monetary sanctions.
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来源期刊
Louisiana Law Review
Louisiana Law Review Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The first issue of the Louisiana Law Review went into print in November of 1938. Since then the Review has served as Louisiana"s flagship legal journal and has become a vibrant forum for scholarship in comparative and civil law topics. The article below is taken from the first issue of the Law Review. The piece was meant to commemorate the founding of the Law Review and to foreshadow the lasting impact that the Louisiana Law Review would have on state jurisprudence and legislation and on the legal landscape of Louisiana for years to come.
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