{"title":"判断启发式","authors":"Hillary A. Sale","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.262725","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This Article tells a story about judges and the development of doctrine (or, arguably, lack thereof), and what happens when Congress both legislatively and rhetorically gives overworked federal courts the permission and the power to exercise docket control by eliminating cases at the motion-to-dismiss stage. It is also a story about the long-run implications of a focus on procedure and form over substance in the realm of securities law. The moral of the story is that when form over substance is the input, form over substance is the output. The story focuses on federal district court judges who are trial management specialists, faced with lengthy dockets. It is drawn from the courts' moves and language, followed, largely, by exploring cases in which courts have deployed judge-made heuristics to securities-fraud claims. In the end, it is a story about the limits of the rule of law. The larger story has its roots in the many years of cases decided since the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 were passed. But, the focus of this story is more recent, unfolding primarily since December of 1995, when Congress passed the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (the \"PSLRA\"), and statutorily created pleading standards for securities-fraud claims. Although the story could be a novel, with chapters encompassing all types of claims and reforms included in the PSLRA, the securities-law portion of this Article is only part of the tale - a backdrop for the story about judging and judges and the heuristics they use and the impression those heuristics create. Section One of the Article discusses district court judges, their workloads, and motives. Then, in Section Two, I explore the heuristics, or shortcuts that are evolving out of those, largely, district court opinions, through the ways in which they have developed and applied one pre-PSLRA standard, called the Motive and Opportunity Test, to the scienter element of claims brought pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act. The district courts have eagerly and overwhelmingly accepted the \"opportunity\" Congress offered them by creating and using heuristics to eliminate cases on motions to dismiss that are arguably better preserved for summary judgment. In Section Three, I review those courts' rhetoric; how they exercise their discretion and the comments and powers they invoke in doing so, arguing that the courts' commentaries create the appearance of disdain for these cases and, sometimes, contempt for the plaintiffs' lawyers involved. Using that language and rhetoric, in combination with the heuristics discussed in Section Two, I then focus on the impressions created by the heuristics and rhetoric, arguing that the district courts are creating the impression that their own desires to clear their dockets have the potential to overwhelm the merits of the cases before them. Lastly, in Section Four, I explore the potential implications of these opinions and the heuristics for the legitimacy of both the securities markets and the courts.","PeriodicalId":35903,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2001-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"15","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Judging Heuristics\",\"authors\":\"Hillary A. 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引用次数: 15
摘要
本文讲述了一个关于法官和原则发展(或者可以说,缺乏原则)的故事,以及当国会在立法和修辞上给予劳累过度的联邦法院许可和权力,通过在动议驳回阶段取消案件来行使摘要控制时会发生什么。这也是一个关于在证券法领域注重程序和形式而不是实质的长期影响的故事。这个故事的寓意是,当形式大于实质是输入时,形式大于实质就是输出。这个故事的重点是联邦地区法院的法官,他们是审判管理专家,面临着冗长的诉讼程序。它是从法院的行动和语言中得出的,其次,主要是通过探索法院在证券欺诈索赔中使用法官启发式的案例。最后,这是一个关于法治局限性的故事。从1933年《证券法》(Securities Act of 1933)和1934年《证券交易法》(Securities Exchange Act of 1934)通过以来的许多年里,案件的裁决都有其根源。但是,这个故事的焦点是最近的,主要是从1995年12月开始展开的,当时国会通过了《私人证券诉讼改革法案》(PSLRA),并在法律上为证券欺诈索赔制定了辩护标准。虽然这个故事可以是一部小说,章节中包含了PSLRA中所有类型的索赔和改革,但本文的证券法部分只是故事的一部分-关于审判和法官以及他们使用的启发式以及这些启发式产生的印象的故事的背景。该条第一节讨论了地区法院法官、他们的工作量和动机。然后,在第二部分中,我探索了启发式或捷径,主要是从地方法院的意见中发展出来的,通过他们开发和应用pslra之前的一个标准的方式,称为动机和机会测试,根据《证券交易法》提出的索赔的科学要素。地方法院急切地、压倒性地接受了国会提供给他们的“机会”,通过创造和使用启发式法来排除动议驳回的案件,这些案件可能更好地保留在即决判决中。在第三部分,我回顾了这些法院的修辞;他们如何行使自己的自由裁量权,以及他们在这样做时援引的评论和权力,他们认为法院的评论造成了对这些案件的蔑视,有时甚至是对原告律师的蔑视。使用这种语言和修辞,结合第二节中讨论的启发式,然后我将重点放在启发式和修辞所产生的印象上,认为地方法院正在创造一种印象,即他们自己清理案卷的愿望有可能压倒他们面前案件的是非曲直。最后,在第四节中,我探讨了这些意见的潜在含义以及对证券市场和法院合法性的启发。
This Article tells a story about judges and the development of doctrine (or, arguably, lack thereof), and what happens when Congress both legislatively and rhetorically gives overworked federal courts the permission and the power to exercise docket control by eliminating cases at the motion-to-dismiss stage. It is also a story about the long-run implications of a focus on procedure and form over substance in the realm of securities law. The moral of the story is that when form over substance is the input, form over substance is the output. The story focuses on federal district court judges who are trial management specialists, faced with lengthy dockets. It is drawn from the courts' moves and language, followed, largely, by exploring cases in which courts have deployed judge-made heuristics to securities-fraud claims. In the end, it is a story about the limits of the rule of law. The larger story has its roots in the many years of cases decided since the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 were passed. But, the focus of this story is more recent, unfolding primarily since December of 1995, when Congress passed the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (the "PSLRA"), and statutorily created pleading standards for securities-fraud claims. Although the story could be a novel, with chapters encompassing all types of claims and reforms included in the PSLRA, the securities-law portion of this Article is only part of the tale - a backdrop for the story about judging and judges and the heuristics they use and the impression those heuristics create. Section One of the Article discusses district court judges, their workloads, and motives. Then, in Section Two, I explore the heuristics, or shortcuts that are evolving out of those, largely, district court opinions, through the ways in which they have developed and applied one pre-PSLRA standard, called the Motive and Opportunity Test, to the scienter element of claims brought pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act. The district courts have eagerly and overwhelmingly accepted the "opportunity" Congress offered them by creating and using heuristics to eliminate cases on motions to dismiss that are arguably better preserved for summary judgment. In Section Three, I review those courts' rhetoric; how they exercise their discretion and the comments and powers they invoke in doing so, arguing that the courts' commentaries create the appearance of disdain for these cases and, sometimes, contempt for the plaintiffs' lawyers involved. Using that language and rhetoric, in combination with the heuristics discussed in Section Two, I then focus on the impressions created by the heuristics and rhetoric, arguing that the district courts are creating the impression that their own desires to clear their dockets have the potential to overwhelm the merits of the cases before them. Lastly, in Section Four, I explore the potential implications of these opinions and the heuristics for the legitimacy of both the securities markets and the courts.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation (JELL) has provided a national, unbiased forum for the discussion and presentation of new ideas and theories in environmental and natural resources law since 1985. JELL educates students for careers in environmental law, disseminates important information to the environmental community, and plays an integral role at the University of Oregon Law School"s nationally and internationally recognized environmental law program.