Legal formalism
Encyclopedia : L : LE : LEG : Legal formalism
Legal formalism is a Positivist view in jurisprudence and the philosophy of law. While Benthamite [positivism] can be seen as appertaining to the legislature, legal formalism appertains to the Judge; that is, formalism does not (as positivists do) suggest that the substantive justice of a law is irrelevant, but rather, that in a democracy, that is a question for the legislature to address, not the Judge.
Formalism explained
Legal formalists argue that judges and other public officials should be constrained in their interpretation of legal texts by their plain meaning, suggesting that investing the judiciary with the power to say what the law should be, rather than confining them to expositing what the law does say, violates the separation of powers. This argument finds its most eloquent expression in the Massachusetts [Constitution of 1780], which provides:- [T]he judicial shall never exercise the legislative and executive powers, or either of them; to the end [that Massachusetts' government] may be a government of laws, and not of men. [#endnote_masscon]
Larry Solum's [Legal Theory Lexicon] describes Formalism as:
- "[A] commitment to a set of ideas that more or less includes the following:
- 1. The law consists of rules.
- 2. Legal rules can be meaningful.
- 3. Legal rules can be applied to particular facts.
- 4. Some actions accord with meaningful legal rules; other actions do not.
- 5. The standard for what constitutes following a rule vel non can be publicly knowable and the focus of intersubjective agreement."
- The legal positivist concentrates his attention on law at the point where it emerges from the institutional processes that brought it into being. It is the finally made law itself that furnishes the subject of his inquiries. How it was made and what directions of human effort went into its creation are, for him, irrelevant. [#endnote_positivism]
Formalism compared to Legal Realism
Legal formalism can be contrasted to legal instrumentalism, a view associated with American legal realism. Instrumentalism is usually the view that creativity in the interpretation of legal texts is justified in order to assure that the law serves good public policy and social interests, although legal instrumentalists could also see the end of law as the promotion of justice or the protection of human rights. Legal formalists counter that giving judges authority to change the law to serve their own ideas about good policy undermines the rule of law.Formalism critiqued by Critical Legal Theorists
Another critique of legal formalism has been offered by the critical legal studies movement, which has argued, inter alia, that law is indeterminate and that formalism ignores the relationship between law and the established power structure. Sammy Adelman & Ken Foster have written from this perspective [#endnote_adelmanfoster1] that:- Legal formalism . . . has three principal dimensions.
- *First, it represents the notion that law is made by the state and its agencies so that all legal rules appear imperative and willed by the political sovereign . . .
- *[Second] is its indifference to substantive justice . . . [E]very citizen [is subject] to the same rules so that formal justice masks [or overrides] substantive social differences and inequalities. Legal discourse is [thereby] isolated from the purview of political, social and ethical/moral discourses, and legal reasoning is severed from any external criterion which can be used to judge and evaluate social behaviour . . .
- *[T]hird . . . is its explicitly rational and scientific discourse . . . Legal formalism presents law as a gapless, logical and internally coherent system, in which correct legal decisions can be deduced by formal reasoning.
- These characteristics of formalism are frequently hailed as virtues yet merely serve to emphasise the false separation of judgement from political and social factors. [#endnote_adelmanfoster2]
Justice Scalia & Formalism
Justice Antonin Scalia of the United States Supreme Court is noted for his formalist views about a variety of topics, particularly his view that the United States Constitution should be interpreted in accord with its original meaning and his view that statutes should be read in accord with their plain meaning.In A Matter of Interpretation, Scalia defended textualism - and, by extension, formalism - saying:
- Of all the criticisms leveled against textualism, the most mindless is that it is formalist. The answer to that is, of course it's formalistic! The rule of law is about form . . . A murderer has been caught with blood on his hands, bending over the body of his victim; a neighbour with a video camera has filmed the crime and the murderer has confessed in writing and on videotape. We nonetheless insist that before the state can punish this miscreant, it must conduct a full-dress criminal trial that results in a verdict of guilty. Is that not formalism? Long live formalism! It is what makes us a government of laws and not of men. [#endnote_scalia.amoi]
Footnotes and references
- ↑ Massachusetts [Constitution of 1780], Part The First, Art. XXX.
- ↑ Black's Law Dictionary, 6th ed., p.913
- ↑ Fuller, Anatomy of the Law (1968 ed.), pp.177-8. Cf. Justice Scalia's rejection of intentionalism, quoted in Originalism: "If you are a textualist, you don't care about the intent, and I don't care if the framers of the Constitution had some secret meaning in mind when they adopted its words."
- ↑ [1 Critical Lawyer's Handbook 7].
- ↑ Ibid.
- ↑ Scalia, A Matter of Interpretation, Amy Guttman ed. 1997, at p.25 (emphasis in original).
- ↑ Scalia, The Rule of Law as a Law of Rules, 56 U. Chi. L. Rev. 1175 (1989)
- ↑ See [link] [link]. However, n.b. Scalia's opinion in Raich was premised on the scope of the necessary and proper clause, and drew on a line of legal reasoning - that the necessary and proper clause says, in effect, that the Federal Government may take broad measures in pursuit of goals which are themselves Constitutional - the lineage of which stretches back to McCulloch v. Maryland. [link] It is therefore arguable, at best, that Raich constitutes apostasy on Scalia's part. As Prof. Orin Kerr has [pointed out], to argue that Scalia voted the way he did in Raich because he doesn't like drug dealers requires one to ignore cases such as United States v. Booker and Kyllo v. United States where Scalia defied his conservative colleagues to vote for drug dealers.
- redirect
See also
- Judicial activism
- Legal positivism
- Originalism
- Critical legal studies
- Frederick Schauer
External links
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
