Author Archives: Michael Froomkin

Circuit Justice Roberts’s Eleven-and-a-Half-Day-Gap

Did Chief Justice Roberts accidentally create grounds for reopening (and even rearguing) Banner v. United States?

Here’s the argument:

This case is an appeal decided today [Hat Tip to How Appealing for the link] by a panel consisting of Chief Justice Roberts, sitting as a Circuit Justice, and D.C. Circuit Judges Edwards and Rogers. Chief Justice Roberts is the judge formerly known as "Circuit Judge Roberts," who was originally assigned to hear the appeal in that capacity, along with Edwards and Rogers.

On September 29, 2005, Circuit Judge Roberts took the oath of office as Chief Justice of the United States. And we can only presume that at that point, if not before, he effectively resigned his commission as U.S. Circuit Judge for the District of Columbia Circuit. Indeed, the Federal Judicial Center website states, in its entry for "Circuit Judge Roberts," that Roberts’s "[s]ervice terminated on September 29, 2005, due to appointment to another judicial position."

On October 11, 2005, the Supreme Court issued an order assigning Chief Justice Roberts to be Circuit Justice for the D.C. Circuit. Under 28 U.S.C. § 43(b), "Each Court of Appeals shall consist of the circuit judges of the circuit in regular active service. The circuit justice and justices or judges designated or assigned shall be competent to sit as judges of the court." So, in plain English, Chief Justice Roberts was a member of the circuit at the time of the opinion—i.e., today.

The problem, however, is that Roberts does not appear to have been a member of the circuit, either as a circuit judge or as a circuit Justice, between the date he left the court (September 29) and the date of the circuit Justice assignment order (October 11). What’s more, it’s not clear how, when he "rejoined" the court, he also rejoined the panel. After all, the normal procedure on most circuits (and, we presume, the D.C. Circuit) when a vacancy arises is either to leave the third seat vacant since the two remaining judges constitute a quorum, or to randomly assign a third judge.

This may seem like pedantry, but it was this very kind of punctilio that forced the Supreme Court to vacate a whole slew of criminal convictions affirmed by an "improperly constituted" Ninth Circuit panel in Nguyen v. United States in 2003. In Nguyen, the Court held that the presence of a judge who was not a duly constituted member of the court was grounds to invalidate any decision in which he participated, even when the remaining two judges would have constituted a quorum and would have chosen the same outcome.

It is certainly possible that the proper order reassigning Circuit Justice Roberts to the original panel does exist, and was filed by the Clerk of the D.C. Circuit. We have been able to find no such order, however, on the D.C. Circuit’s website, and a cursory search of the PACER docket summary for Banner reveals none. If there was indeed no such order, it certainly appears as if the losing party has a good claim that the panel decision is voidable under Nguyen.

In a subsequent post (which we hope never to write), we’ll explain whether Chief Justice Roberts would have to recuse from the cert. petition from the reargument, since he would no longer be a member of the panel below.

[Co-authored by Michael Froomkin and Steve Vladeck for cross-posting on PrawfsBlawg and Discourse.net, as an unfortunate result of our offices being close together.]

Posted in Law: Constitutional Law, Law: The Supremes | 11 Comments

Wilma Aftermath: Grasping at Straws

FP&L says that 172,300 customers in Miami-Dade still lack power, which makes about 18% of the 956,500 affected by Hurricane Wilma. In other words, 82% of customers in Miami-Dade have their power back.

But we still don’t.

As the Miami Herald reports

In Coral Gables, about a quarter of residents are still using flashlights, candles and generators — and the percentage has remained the same for three days, said City Manager David Brown.

”The percentages aren’t going to change that much anymore because the pockets are so little,” Brown said. “When you go and turn on 25 residents, it doesn’t change the number on 5,500. Unfortunately, when you’ve been without power for many days, tempers start to flare, frustrations start to rise.”

FPL Vice President Geisha Williams acknowledged that progress was becoming piecemeal. The work is now down to blown-out transformers and downed wires, especially in small neighborhoods.

”It’s slow and it’s gritty and it’s tough,” she said.

The good news is that yesterday at about 6pm, an actual FP&L truck parked on my street and actual FP&L employees got out to look at the damage behind the house across the street.

Then they went away.

Posted in Personal | 1 Comment

UM Arbitration Event Tuesday Evening

I’m going to this one.

The Office of International and Foreign Graduate Programs and Shutts & Bowen, LLP present

Dr. Robert Briner, Chairman of the International Court of Arbitration International Chamber of Commerce, Paris, France

&

Loraine Brennan, Esq., Director, Arbitration and ADR, North America International Court of Arbitration, New York, New York

“Current Trends In International Arbitration”

Tuesday, November 8, 2005

8:00 p.m. – Reception, Alma Jennings Foundation Student Lounge

8:30 p.m. – Lecture, Room F109

Continue reading

Posted in Law: International Law | Comments Off on UM Arbitration Event Tuesday Evening

What He Said (Mark Schmitt edition)

The Decembrist: Norquist’s Paradox has some wise things to say about the political meaning of the victory of Colorado”s Referendum C, suspending the state’s “Taxpayer Bill of Rights” (TABOR) law which limited government spending.

Posted in Politics: US | Comments Off on What He Said (Mark Schmitt edition)

Cost of Bush’s War Is Paid in Lives

A student emails,

as I was leaving your class and checking my messages, I got one from my sister, informing me that our brother, [name] had been killed in Basra.

Posted in Iraq | 1 Comment

Hurricane Wilma – Reimbursement of Flight Rescheduling Fees

This just popped into my mailbox:

Students who changed their airline flights due to changes in the exam schedule for the fall semester will be reimbursed for any fees assessed by the airlines for the ticket change. The reimbursement will be in the form of a credit towards the spring semester. Read the detailed procedures to receive a reimbursement.

Posted in U.Miami | 1 Comment