Here Is Why a Texas Judge Concluded That the State's Abortion Ban Is Unconstitutional
District Court Judge David Peeples focused on the law's "unique and unprecedented" enforcement mechanism rather than abortion rights.

S.B. 8, the Texas law that bans abortion after fetal cardiac activity can be detected, relies on a novel enforcement mechanism that was designed to evade early judicial review: It authorizes lawsuits by "any person" against "any person" who performs or facilitates a prohibited abortion and promises plaintiffs at least $10,000 in "statutory damages," plus reimbursement of their legal expenses, if they win. That "unique and unprecedented" arrangement, a Texas judge ruled yesterday, violates the state constitution's standing requirements for civil actions, the separation of powers, and the right to due process.
Travis County District Court Judge David Peeples was responding to 14 lawsuits challenging S.B. 8, which took effect at the beginning of September. His 48-page order emphasizes how the law's "completely new" enforcement mechanism favors plaintiffs over defendants and warns that the same strategy could be deployed against all sorts of politically disfavored constitutional rights.
Crucially, Peeples says, S.B. 8 plaintiffs need not claim any personal injury, and the state's lawyers "said offhandedly, in papers filed with this court, that 'any person' means anyone in the world." But in practice, he thinks, S.B. 8 plaintiffs will tend to be Texas residents, because the law "modifies the usual rules" by saying that "any Texas claimant may choose to sue in the county where he lives," as opposed to the county where the defendant lives. It says the venue can be changed only if all parties agree.
In a big state like Texas, Peeples notes, "venue is especially important because it is so much more inconvenient and expensive (in terms of money and lost time) to litigate a case in a distant forum. But venue is not just about distance and inconvenience—to choose venue is also to choose the judge (or judges) and the jury pool. All this can often influence the outcome, sometimes decisively."
"SB 8 empowers some 21+million Texas adults to file enforcement cases," Peeples notes. "Each of Texas' 484 District Courts, many of its 256 Statutory County Courts, and all of its 840 Justices of the Peace would have jurisdiction to hear these cases." Litigants and activists "will learn quickly which venues and courts are friendly to SB 8 suits and which are not," he says, and "SB 8 filings will gravitate to the more favorable venues." People who support the law and have the resources to pay for attorneys could bankroll lawsuits by like-minded Texans who live in the counties where the prospects of prevailing are strongest.
S.B. 8 authorizes lawsuits against anyone who "aids or abets" a banned abortion, explicitly including insurers or anyone else who pays for the procedure and implicitly including various other ancillary actors. That means the bounty can be multiplied several times in any given case. "A judgment against defendants Dr. A, Nurse B, Contributor C, and Driver D would not be simply a joint and several judgment for $10,000, collectable against any of the four defendants for a total recovery of $10,000," Peeples says. "Instead the claimant would have a judgment against each defendant for $10,000 individually, for a total of $40,000—plus more if the court awards more, in addition to costs and attorney fees."
Peeples mentions two other features of S.B. 8 that make the threat of litigation especially daunting. While "lawyers and law firms who advise their clients to bring a pre-enforcement challenge to SB 8's provisions are potentially liable for the claimant's attorney fees," he notes, "a defendant wrongfully sued and totally innocent can never recover his attorney fees from an SB 8 claimant." Furthermore, "the longstanding rules of claim preclusion (res judicata) do not apply in SB 8 cases."
That means "a judgment against an abortion defendant does not bar additional lawsuits against him on the same facts and same event unless he has paid the judgment in full." Hence "second and third claimants litigating the same event have every reason to pursue their lawsuits in other counties because if they are the first to collect, their judgment will be first in time and will bar the others."
This scheme, Peeples concludes, is inconsistent with the Texas Constitution's separation of powers provision, which "denies the judiciary authority to decide issues in the abstract," and its "open courts" provision, which "provides court access only to a 'person for an injury done him.'" He says case law "establishes that standing in Texas generally requires some kind of harm or injury."
The state cited previous exceptions to that general rule, including a 1915 Texas Supreme Court decision that allowed a private lawsuit under a statute authorizing "any citizen" to seek an injunction against a "bawdyhouse." But in that case, Peeples notes, the plaintiff alleged that the brothel, which was near his business, had caused him economic harm, and the remedy did not include monetary damages.
"None of the cases that mention statutory standing involved a statute that granted standing to 'any person,'" Peeples writes. "And none authorized the claimant to win a significant, mandatory amount of money without showing any connection to, or harm from, the defendant or his conduct. Many of the statutory cases grant standing to challenge the action of a government agency. None give persons standing to seek a money judgment against a fellow citizen, and then to use the machinery of the courts and collection procedures of our rules and statutes."
Peeples thinks the state's analogy between S.B. 8 and "private attorney general" laws is inapt. "It is one thing to authorize taxpayers or citizens to file suits against government officials to make them obey a law, and to compensate these private attorneys general for their time and trouble and their attorney fees with money from the state treasury, as statutes sometimes do," he says. "It is quite another thing to incentivize citizens or persons to file suits against other private citizens to extract money from them, with no pretense of compensating the claimant for anything."
Based on the relevant precedents, Peeples concludes, "SB 8' s grant of standing for persons who have not been harmed to sue persons who have not harmed them, mandating a large award without proof of harm, is unconstitutional." He also holds that the lawsuits authorized by S.B. 8 amount to "an unguided and unsupervised delegation of enforcement power to private persons," which "violates the Texas Constitution's separation of powers provision."
Peeples likewise agrees with the plaintiffs that S.B. 8 violates the 14th Amendment's guarantee of due process. "SB 8 is not compensatory, and it is not a form of statutory liquidated damages known to American law," he says. "The statute authorizes punishment by civil lawsuit, and deprivation of property, without due process of law."
S.B. 8 "cannot lawfully be punitive without observing at least some of the constitutional rights and procedures for criminal cases," Peeples says. "SB 8 does not come close to satisfying constitutional due process. Instead it lessens the procedural rights enjoyed by other civil litigants, such as a court and jury with discretion to assess damages, and fair notice of what the court and jury may consider when deciding whether to award more than the statutory minimum."
Peeples rejected the plaintiffs' argument that S.B. 8 violates a right to abortion protected by the Texas Constitution, and he did not address whether the law is consistent with the U.S. Supreme Court's abortion precedents (which it clearly is not). But he devotes several paragraphs to a concern that Justice Brett Kavanaugh raised when the Supreme Court considered whether S.B. 8's reliance on private civil actions means federal courts cannot rule on the law's constitutionality before it has been enforced: If Texas legislators can use that trick to delay judicial review, so can legislators elsewhere who disapprove of other rights recognized by the Supreme Court.
"In our polarized country," Peeples warns, "other states with different electorates and different priorities might decide to use these procedures to put other people out of business or to stamp out behavior they dislike intensely, including other areas of life covered by constitutional law. The undesired activities targeted in other states, of course, might be different from abortion providers in Texas."
A state might, for example, "copy the procedures and replace the abortion provisions with language that forbids openly carrying guns, or with language requiring trigger locks on all guns." A state "might use the procedures to enforce discrimination laws against bakery owners who will not, as a matter of conscience, decorate a cake with a message that is offensive to them or that violates their religious beliefs." Legislators could attack constitutionally protected speech by "adapt[ing] these procedures to single out climate change deniers, or those who utter 'hate speech,' or American History teachers who teach X or don't teach X." They could even chill the speech of pro-life activists by authorizing lawsuits against them.
Needless to say, conservatives who applaud S.B. 8 because they oppose abortion won't necessarily like the results when people with different views use the same approach to promote their agendas. "We are a diverse and creative people, and it seems naïve to hope these procedures will be cabined voluntarily once they are upheld," Peeples writes. "A new and creative series of statutes could appear year after year, to be enforced by eager ideological claimants, who could bring suit in their home counties, where the judges would do their constitutional duty and enforce the law. Pandora's Box has already been opened a bit, and time will tell."
Texas plans to appeal Peeples' ruling. "We have said all along that in order to fully restore abortion access in Texas, we need a decision in the U.S. Supreme Court or the Texas Supreme Court," Julie Murray, a senior staff attorney at Planned Parenthood, told The New York Times. "Today's decision is a step in the right direction, but it is not enough relief for abortion providers."
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This law was just a heartbeat away from being judicially overturned.
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>>warns that the same strategy could be deployed against all sorts
the slippery slope only works if you start from the left
All they really need to do is just impose a tax on anyone who gets an abortion. You know, a penaltax, (or peniletax if you prefer.)
The peniletax happens when she keeps the baby.
And AG Paxton does the non-consensual collecting. That's actually the main volume job of the OAG in Texas, per statute.
https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/child-support
The Texas Constitution doesn't give him much to do. See art iv, sec. 22.
ATTORNEY GENERAL. The Attorney General shall represent the State in all suits and pleas in the Supreme Court of the State in which the State may be a party, and shall especially inquire into the charter rights of all private corporations, and from time to time, in the name of the State, take such action in the courts as may be proper and necessary to prevent any private corporation from exercising any power or demanding or collecting any species of taxes, tolls, freight or wharfage not authorized by law. He shall, whenever sufficient cause exists, seek a judicial forfeiture of such charters, unless otherwise expressly directed by law, and give legal advice in writing to the Governor and other executive officers, when requested by them, and perform such other duties as may be required by law.
https://statutes.capitol.texas.gov/Docs/CN/htm/CN.4.htm
---
But, accordingly to Judge Peeples, we are now supposed to feel sorry for abortionists that face collection if they don't pay any judgments. Like that's not the same fate other civil judgment debtors face on an ongoing basis.
ON THE MATTER OF INCONVENIENT VENUE
And here is another jewel to consider: For the convenience of the AG, all Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board student loan collection lawsuits must be filed in Travis County (Austin). It doesn't matter where the defaulting former college-goer or dropout lives in the far-flung State of Texas or elsewhere in the US or abroad. And processing these cookie-cutter lawsuits to default, agreed, or summary judgment is the main biz of the civil county courts at law in Travis County.
Ah, a tax on girls, collected by goons with guns. Lansover Baptist Republicans will go for it in a heartbeat if the other ploy to get other wankers to bully girls falls through.
You’re a baby murdering cunt. You sick fuck.
Single Mom Makes $89,844/Yr in Her Spare Time on The Computer Without Selling Anything.JHG you can bring from $5000-$8000 of extra income every month. working at home for 4 hours a day, and earning could be even bigger.
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All you need to know is they found a leftist judge for Sullum to fawn over.
4th article about Peeples = secret invite for drinks.
Why was there do much fuss trying to get federal courts to hear chaplenges against S.B. 8.
Judge David Peeples
Definitely a big fan of letting the Peeples court handle these types of cases.
"It is one thing to authorize taxpayers or citizens to file suits against government officials to make them obey a law, and to compensate these private attorneys general for their time and trouble and their attorney fees with money from the state treasury, as statutes sometimes do,"
Government officials whom enjoy qualified immunity?
GOOD LUCK SUING THE STATE OF TEXAS AND ITS AGENTS
Thanks to SCOTX, State of Texas and its components are immune to suit and liability, including attorney's fees. It's a common-law doctrine, meaning they made it up. Actually it's a repurposed version of "The King can do no wrong". A Republican version. Supremes have the word first. Lege can selectively waive immunity, but if a statute says that AGENCY XYZ can sue and be sued it doesn't actually mean that the agency can be sued.
Don't believe it, check out Tooke v. City of Mexia, 197 S.W.3d 325 (Tex. 2006).
https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=11243105481893663480&q=tooke+v+city+of+mexia&hl=en&as_sdt=4,44
Then, for good measure, there is governmental immunity, official immunity, absolute judicial immunity, derivative judicial immunity, attorney immunity ....
These are the major judge-made exceptions the open courts guarantee: No redress for injury against the Sovereign (not the people, really).
When it comes to personal culpability of the accuser, I find this story illuminating: This woman falsely accused her own father of incest--and came to believe it--only to later realize that it was all in her imagination.
"More than 20 years ago, Meredith Maran falsely accused her father of molestation. That she came to believe such a thing was possible reveals what can happen when personal turmoil meets a powerful social movement. In her book "My Lie: A True Story of False Memory" (the introduction of which is excerpted on Salon), Maran recounts the 1980s feminist-inspired campaign to expose molestation, which hit feverish levels in 1988 with the book 'The Courage to Heal." As an early reporter on the story, Maran observed family therapy sessions, interviewed molesters and steeped herself in cases where abuse clearly took place. Meanwhile, she divorced her husband and fell in love with a woman who was also an incest survivor. Maran began having nightmares about her own molestation and soon what had been a contentious relationship with her father turned into accusations of unspeakable crimes. Eventually, she came to realize the truth. She was the person who had done wrong."
----Salon
https://www.salon.com/2010/09/20/meredith_maran_my_lie_interview/
It's hard to imagine Salon publishing an article about how and why a woman would falsely accuse someone of a sexual crime, these days, but that woman's explanation (rather than justification) makes sense. When a someone is suffering psychologically after a traumatic event, struggling with the aftermath, there's an industry of self-help people, news media types, and a psychology healthcare industry that's happy to supply a narrative for why they're having such a hard time. People tend to remember things through a highly emotional lens. In that state, they can start to reinterpret their experiences and their memories through those filters, and before you know it, you've got the McMartin preschool trial.
I think it is the prosecutor's job to be emotionally detached from an accuser who is making allegations that don't add up. I'm not saying that women in these situations shouldn't be believed, but I am saying that traumatized people often have trouble dealing with their memories--and if you're prosecuting a case where the evidence doesn't corroborate the accusations being made, looking at the quality of the evidence against the evidence is part of your job.
For those of you who may not know, the McMartins were accused of sexually abusing hundreds of children--but all of the charges were eventually dropped for lack of evidence. The therapists and mental health industry at the time was big into treating everyone like a victim of sexual abuse, and their methods (and interviews) appear to have convinced dozens of children that they were sexually abused when they weren't.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McMartin_preschool_trial
Witness testimony should be considered always unreliable.
It authorizes lawsuits by "any person" against "any person" who performs or facilitates a prohibited abortion and promises plaintiffs at least $10,000 in "statutory damages," plus reimbursement of their legal expenses, if they win. That "unique and unprecedented" arrangement, a Texas judge ruled yesterday, violates the state constitution's standing requirements for civil actions, the separation of powers, and the right to due process.
That sounds suspiciously like the way California enforces their ADA compliance, where you have a whole industry centered around handicapped people roaming around trying to find people out of compliance with the ADA laws that they can sue. What exactly makes Texas' similar enforcement mechanism "unique and unprecedented"? Aside from the obvious fact that right-wing deplorables have started playing by the same rules the left-wing progressives have been playing by all along, I mean.
In California, at least the plaintiff has to contend that s/he was harmed in some way (even if s/he sought out situations that could cause such "harm"). With the Texas law, the plaintiff has no need to claim any personal harm at all. It is a significant difference, even if it is also an escalation of an existing trend.
Every court in Texas is under duty to ascertain whether it has jurisdiction. That includes standing, and the SCOTX gets to fashing the relevant constitutional standing doctrine. They often say they are inspired by Lujan, but they aren't bound by it. The statute doesn't have to specifically require an injury, and there are many statutes don't require an injury as a condition for invoking it. What about an adoption suit? A name change. A provisional occupational driver's license. Probating a will. Where is the injury?
True. The statutes you reference do not require proof of injury, nor are they supposed to. They do not pit a plaintiff against a defendant. They do not require a litigated 'settlement', other than perhaps an adoption suit, although I'm not sure of the context you're using in that example. In other words, your examples do not seem to be applicable here.
The examples establish the principle that injury is not an indispensable requirement to file a civil lawsuit in Texas state courts and obtain a judgment. Ergo, the proposition that the "open courts" provision of the Texas constitution requires injury as an essential precondition ("constitutional standing") to get into court and maintain suit is either invalid or being regularly violated on a massive statewide scale.
FAMILY CODE LITIGATION
As for adoption, the rights of the natural parents have to be terminated before it can happen, which can be for cause or by agreement. The child cannot bring an adoption suit because of legal incapacity, so no standing to complain of injury either. But even if there is injury or neglect, and it is asserted by the State as parens patriae on behalf of the minor (through CPS) and would arguably satisfy the injury criterion to get into court by proxy, that still doesn't cover the scenario of a termination&adoption agreed by all parties (natural parents and persons seeking to adopt).
As for grandparent access, the statute presumes adverse parties, but what is the grandparent's material injury for constitutional standing purposes?
Legal actions to change name are formally labeled as non-adversary because there is no other party (and are thus different from grandparent access suits) but the Court granting or denying it has to consider the public interest and make sure its not adversely affected. Suppose your last name is Butt or Dick and you want to run for office. You may decide that an amended surname (say, Butterfly or Dickens) would do you good in a low level race where folks don't know anything about the candidate's qualities and just use the candidates' name as a decision heuristic. So why not change it to make it better sounding and more reflective of who you are and aspire to be, or just neutral? No injury, no harm. Just your choice, subject to court review and approval. Is the decree changing the name void because constitutional standing requirements were never satisfied? Is the statute that authorizes the legal name change itself void because the Lege acted unconstitutionally by omitted an injury requirement?
Yes, but frequently the "harm" is simply that the code isn't being adhered to, strictly, even if it doesn't impede the handicapped person from gaining entry or the ability to make use of the premises.
Ah, so tu quoque now means "but Mom... all the other bullies are doing it!"
These scaremongers miss the point of being right-wing radicals with the taste of power on their lips. Sure, in theory, states with progressive governments could use these rules to do things conservatives don't like. But the entire point of this Republican fascist movement is to deny progressives of power. To put them in camps and exterminate them, if necessary. Half the people on these supposed libertarian boards openly say so. It's not a joke. Power is power.
Using this deranged gimmick against gun rights. Ha! How innocent we are to suppose Justice Rape Bruh and Justice Handmaid wouldn't find some ludicrous excuse to change their mind willy-nilly, depending on who gets the benefit. Their recent abortion rulings are like the fingerpaints of children. There is no legal scholarship going on here.
"But you can just drop your baby off at a fire station, thus abortion can be outlawed." That's the intellectual honesty we're dealing with.
What's intellectually dishonest is to pretend that procreation is not a joint endeavor by a man and a woman, that the fetus father has no interest in whether a pregnancy is carried to terms, and that the fetus is not human and unique.
So should the state punish women for not telling their sex partners when they're pregnant?
Could you kindly list all the ways you think the state should punish women for infractions during pregnancy?
Bonus points for explaining how putting women in prison for the crime of not incubating babies in the state-approved way helps anybody, including babies.
Well, the failure to "incubate" the baby does result in its death.
So there's that.
IMHO, the father has nine months, after being notified that his partner became pregnant, to decide, unilaterally, that he bears no responsibility for the child's upbringing.
Just as the mother gets to decide, unilaterally, whether the child will live, or not.
No. What is intellectually dishonest is to assert what you have just asserted - while pretending that the fetus is of absolutely no humanity or uniqueness the nanosecond it is born.
Your ilk is only interested in making moral judgements about women of childbearing age and sex. Not 'pro-life' at all.
Fallacy alert: Attribution of (bad) motives doesn't address the validity of the proposition, much less refute it. And where are the pro-life people that consider the newborn as having "absolutely no humanity"? - Reality-remote if not preposterous on its face.
Also, as a general proposition, you can't have a legal system, or a functioning society, without normative principles, whether you call them moral positions or not. Some authority ("state") must always exist stop people from killing each other at will (i.e., to deter homicide) and you can't have deterrence without the threat of punishment for those that are not otherwise willing to restrained themselves.
That said, on abortion it's not just a matter of proscription and criminal penalities, but of sexual equality (equal protection).
How can it be just that the fetus father is subject to criminal prosecution for homicide if he causes the death of his unborn child (resulting in miscarriage/stillbirth) but the fetus mother is not only exempt from liability, but supposedly has a federal constitutional right to do what her partner-in-conception goes to jail for?
I have previously cited to key case in Texas. Here it is again:
Flores v. State, 245 SW 3d 432 - Tex: Court of Criminal Appeals 2008
Appellant was convicted of murdering his pregnant girlfriend's twin fetuses by stepping on her abdomen, though he maintains that she also took measures to cause the deaths. Appellant raises three constitutional challenges to the capital murder statute. We hold that the statute is constitutional. In addition, appellant contends that the court of appeals erred in ruling that he was not entitled to a jury instruction on the lesser-included offense of deadly conduct. We disagree. Thus, we shall affirm the court of appeals.
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?scidkt=1872185080165793642&as_sdt=2&hl=en
QED. As I said - your ilk does not give a shit about the only 'life' at stake - the fetus. Only about punishing the adults.
Wait, you think progressives don’t have any power?
That explains a lot.
Tony could use clearer terminology. Some national socialists are already backing away from using "liberal" to mean "Jew." A mystically conservative blog titled Progressingamerica struggles to portray Teedy Rosenfeld as the Avatar of Satan, and drive an epistemological wedge between the concepts of Progressive and Liberal. Outside of These Fascist States "liberal" and "libertarian" are the same concept, differing only in degree of integrity. Yet one struggles in vain to find any substantive difference between German nationalist view of "Jew" and GOP visions of "liberal."
Um... seen the news from the un-recalled Governor of Kristallnacht Kalifornia lately?
Seems like an inane metaphor, but - to use it as a teachable moment - here is more on the subject: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kristallnacht.
Incidentally a certain ex-Governator of Kalifornien offered some family-history-tinged remarks on the subject recently. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YhUxguC159o [this appears to be a slimmed-down and arguably sanitized version]
I don't understand why it's murder when a stranger kills a baby, but it isn't when a mother kills it.
If it's open season on babies, then be consistent.
What do you defined as a baby? A zygote? A blastocyst? At what point does a woman lose her personhood and becomes a state mandated incubator? Would you outlaw the forms of birth control that prevents the implantation of the blastocyst?
I would think libertarians would think that big government intruding itself into a woman's uterus is a rather offensive concert. I for one think uterine sovereignty needs to be considered. The closer to conception the more comfortable I am with abortion the closer to birth less comfortable I get. I am a shades of gray person, not an absolutist black-and-white radical.
From the moment of birth it is universally accepted that the mother/parents are "state mandated" caregivers and everyone, on the planet, is "state mandated" to not do anything that would cause its death.
Why is the woman, who took the action that brought this unique life into existence, with its own DNA and blood type, not "state mandated" to so the same?
Because it hasn't made the magical trip down the birth canal?
I don't think much of any uterine sovereignty concept - but most of the R commenters here are not remotely libertarian
Says the dishonest leftist.
This Libertarian evidently has read the 1972-76 LP platform. The Supreme Court sure as hell did.
Ah, Trumpijugend catamites pipe up. Izzat Milo Yannopoulos?
God you’re a tiresome faggot. Your comments are idiotic, not clever. Your phrasing is embarrassingly bizarre, and you’re a baby murdering, anti-theistic, bigot zealot.
It's almost as though lawmakers have to get creative to get around a supreme court that invents imaginary "rights" out of thin air.
Not surprisingly, the discussion in these comments has devolved into a back and forth about abortion. This article is not about that. It is about the mechanism used by the State of Texas (where I've lived for 52 years) to enforce the statute. Seems to me that the judge has made a pretty solid argument regarding standing, and the need for an individual bringing suit to show that they have somehow been harmed.
JUDGE PEEPLE'S STANDING GROUND FOR SB8 INVALIDATION: WILL IT BE REVERSED?
Re: "a pretty solid argument regarding standing, and the need for an individual bringing suit to show that they have somehow been harmed."
Well, it's not just an argument. It's actually a ruling, and it's going up on appeal.
Here is the problem: The lack-of-standing determination cannot be performed prospectively because no one known what basis for standing APART FROM STATUTORY STANDING a future SB8 claimant may possess. So, SB8 should not be subject to a *facial* invalidation on that ground because some subset of the 29 million Texans referenced by Judge Peeples *will be able* to assert a valid interest distinct from the plebs-at-large (or even only the pro-life component thereof) in an illegal abortion; -- a particularized interest distinct from the entitlement to $10,000 in statutory damages for a proven violation.
And for mere standing purposes, the standard to show an interest or harm is lower than proof of liability or actual damages. Nor do the damages even have to be monetary. And at the pleading stage, fact allegations are sufficient. Proof will be needed later.
Additionally, in an actual lawsuit for affirmative relief, the plaintiff is entitled to replead (amend) to assert additional facts pertinent to standing when his or her or its standing is challenged through a plea to the jurisdiction (or some other vehicle, such a rule 91a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim). So, for that reason, an SB8 action could not be nixed at the inception merely based on the absence of any indication in the petition that the plaintiff has DNA, thwarted adoption intentions, or some other stake in the matter of the alleged SB8 violation. Perhaps even thousands of dollars in purpose-pertinent expenditures (i.e., actual damages) in reliance on nonabortion of the unborn child in question. Legally cognizeable reliance interests, such as already having bought a family home with a room for the little forthcoming bundle of joy plus furnishings and life insurance on the full life of the expectant father. Perhaps there is even a gestational agreement in place or a quasi-contractual or otherwise equitable functional equivalent that a court of equity may duly consider at the standing-threshold nothwithstanding the fact that the SB8 claim itself -- and the associated civil remedies -- are purely statutory in character.
But that's not the only problem: Neither Judge Pitman nor Judge Peeples gave effect to severability provisions in SB8, which call for partial invalidation of (unconstitutional provisions and applications only) while leaving the remainder of SB8 intact. Not all types of abortions are protected by Roe/Casey. Not all 29 million of Texans have no interest whatsoever in any one unique fetus.
THE NONRAPISTS
Notably, in every single case of an accomplished conception there will be a human DNA source that meets the definition of "person" who is necessarily implicated in the causal chain (in a "but-for" fashion no less); may be aware of a his personal interest; and might wish to assert it. And this interest has already been recognized through the establishment of a paternity registry, not to mention authorization for pre-birth inception of suits under the Family Code to establish parentage.
So, the proposition that Texans of the male sex (estimated at above 50% of the entirety of the fecund segment of the Lone Star herd) might have an interest in their progeny is *not* unprecedented. It has a solid footing in extant public policy and is not subject to objection on the basis of novelty. Only rapists and perpetrators of incest are expressly disqualified by SB8. The good guys are good to go.
But no such acknowledgement from SB8-progenitors Mitchell and Senator Hughs. Nor from AG Paxton, the state's child-suppor enforcer in chief, or would-be successors Guzman and Bush.
All mum about it: The unremarkable fact the fetus fathers have a personal stake in the fate of the product of sexual intercourse that carries their DNA.
But this is now somehow taboo.
About half the States passed laws making it illegal to teach foreign languages. The Suprema Corte had the guts to strike that usurpation down. County and State Libertarian parties that restore the "repeal of all laws restricting... voluntary termination of pregnancies during their first hundred days" platform verbiage deserve donations. Republicans cross-dressing as Libertarians do not. This is an opportunity for Libertarians to again earn the support of women voters.
This person is a very good judge !!!
Observe the diminished # of nationalsocialist lebensborn commenters. This is because the GOP-packed High court is the only one that matters. In 1923 the Supremes held that Hindus cannot be naturalized and that states may prohibit foreigners from owning land. Theironners also ruled that States could not regulate slaughterhouse wages. Those got noticed.
I did some reading, this actually is plausible as a matter of Texas state law, because they have (probably wrongly) interpreted a unique provision of their state constitution as importing the harm requirement from the federal Article III standing requirements. So even if Texas state law says "unharmed person A may sue person B for X", unharmed person A is not permitted to bring suit in Texas, under some 1993 case whose name I don't recall.
But there's no federal constitutional reason why states need to have a standing requirement at all, let alone meet the Article III actual injury sub-requirement. So I'm not sure what's going to happen to this one on appeal, but the door is still open for copycat acts in other red states. And further, Texas plaintiffs could just allege harm. I'm the baby daddy, that's my grandchild, I need someone to mow my lawn in 10 years, etc.
Red states aren't going to like being cut off from the federal money spigot. Want to take bets on how long it takes for them to come running back with their hands open?
If you still believe that story about conservative states getting more federal dollars than communist ones, I've go a big orange bridge I can sell you.
We won’t split. Instead, we will end the Marxist movement, and the treasonous Democrat party with it. Hopefully you will not survive this event.