法院的友敌:法庭之友的多面性

H. Anderson
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引用次数: 10

摘要

法庭之友在法庭上占有独特的地位:非当事人但仍是辩护人,他们不受诉讼地位和可诉性规则的约束,他们可以向法院提供新的信息和论点。近年来,法庭之友的参与急剧增加,并有可能改变对抗过程。然而,学者和法院将法庭之友视为一个单一的类别,没有充分认识到这个友好的术语实际上涵盖了几种非常不同的类型,从法院指定的特定立场的倡导者,到当事人的朋友(有时由当事人支付),到刚刚错过资格的个人或团体作为干预者。为了更好地理解法庭之友实践的现实,本文基于法院与当事人之间的关系,对法庭之友进行了分类。本文通过对“法庭之友”历史的回顾以及对不同司法管辖区的规则和司法态度的调查来支持这一分类法。我还探讨了“法庭之友”应该是“无私的”这一神话的持续存在,这一神话导致了对“法庭之友”适当角色的混乱推理。现代“法庭之友”一词的增加使我们远离了法庭之友作为与诉讼相关的特殊专业知识或知识的起源。文章的结论是,我们的其他法院不应该盲目地复制最高法院的“法庭之友”开放政策。由雄心勃勃的法律改革和商业倡导者撰写的政党之友简报可能会产生巨大的影响,尤其是在选举产生的法院。法庭之友摘要的增加可能导致对上诉决策的扭曲看法,因此法院的工作更像是立法,而法庭之友摘要更像是游说。为了保持法庭之友制度的有效性,法院应该行使其守门人的权力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Frenemies of the Court: The Many Faces of Amicus Curiae
Amicus curiae occupy a unique place in the courts: non-parties who are nevertheless advocates, who are not bound by rules of standing and justiciability, and who can present the court with new information and arguments. Amicus participation has increased dramatically in recent years, and threatens to alter the adversarial process. Yet scholars and courts treat amicus curiae as a single category, not fully recognizing that this friendly term actually covers several very different types, ranging from court appointed advocates of a particular position, to friends of a party (sometimes paid by the party), to persons or groups who just missed qualifying as interveners. To understand the reality of amicus practice, this article develops a taxonomy of amicus based on the relationship to the court and the parties. The article supports this taxonomy with a look at the history of amicus, and a survey of the rules and judicial attitudes in different jurisdictions. I also explore the persistence of a myth that amicus should be “disinterested,” a myth that has led to confused reasoning about the proper role of amicus. The modern increase in friend of a party amicus has taken us far from the origins of amicus as one with special expertise or knowledge relevant to the litigation. The article concludes that the Supreme Court’s open-door amicus policy should not be mindlessly copied by our other courts. Friend of a party briefs by ambitious law reform and business advocates may exert great influence, particularly on elected courts. The growth in amicus briefs can lead to distorted views of appellate decision-making, so that a court’s work is seen more like legislation and amicus briefs more like lobbying. To preserve the usefulness of the amicus institution, courts should exercise their gatekeeping authority.
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