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Justice Barrett's Shadow Docket Policy: Do The Opposite Of Whatever The Fifth Circuit Did (Updated)
Forget Doe v. Mills. Justice Barrett will grant relief on the shadow docket when the Fifth Circuit steps out of line.
Garland v. Vanderstok presented a challenge to the "Frame or Receiver" rule. (The press has dubbed it the "Ghost Gun" regulation.) The district court vacated the rule, and the Fifth Circuit denied a stay. The Solicitor General then petitioned for a stay of the lower-court ruling on the Supreme Court's emergency docket. Circuit Justice Alito entered a temporary administrative stay. When that time expired, Circuit Justice Alito extended the administrative stay for another four days, until Tuesday, August 8. What did this shadow docket delay mean? On Sunday, I observed that the extension was designed to allow dissenters to prepare a written dissent, or to allow more time for a majority to coalesce.
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court stayed the lower court's ruling. The vote was 5-4, with Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Barrett in the majority. Justices Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch, and Kavanaugh noted their dissent, but they did not prepare a dissent. The four-day extension was apparently not granted to allow the dissenters time to prepare a dissent. (It is possible a draft dissent was circulated but was never published.) Rather, it seems the purpose of the extension was to try to cobble together a fifth vote to deny a stay. But a fifth vote was not to be had. Why? Because Justice Barrett declined to cast that vote.
Now Justice Barrett has told us that we should "read the opinion" to understand the Court's shadow docket rulings. But there was no analysis here. Just an unsigned order with no analysis.
What should we make of Justice Barrett's decision here? Well, by my count, since Doe v. Mills in October 2021, Justice Barrett has (likely) voted to grant or deny a stay on the shadow docket six times, where certiorari before judgment was not granted. (I have a few caveats noted below). Those six cases are Austin v. U.S. Navy Seals 1-26 (likely granting stay), NetChoice v. Paxton (vacating stay), United States v. Texas (granting stay), FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine (likely granting stay), Danco Laboratories v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine (likely granting stay), and now Garland v. Vanderstok (granting stay).
All six cases share something in common: Justice Barrett did the opposite of whatever a conservative Fifth Circuit panel did. When the Fifth Circuit granted a stay, Justice Barrett vacated the stay. When the Fifth Circuit granted an injunction, Justice Barrett stayed the injunction. And all of those Fifth Circuit panels included well-known conservative jurists. Indeed, the first three cases were presided by Edith Jones, whom I've described as the conservative lodestar of the Fifth Circuit.
By my count, with a few caveats, since Doe v. Mills, Justice Barrett has not granted shadow docket relief on any application from any other circuit. I am omitting Glossip v. Oklahoma and Mountain Valley Pipeline v. Wilderness Society, as no dissents were noted, and it is not feasible to count unrecorded dissents. And cert before judgment was granted in Arizona v. Mayorkas and Department of Education v. Brown.(Please e-mail me if I am missing a case).
Meanwhile, Justice Kavanaugh, who joined the Doe v. Mills concurrence, voted with Justices Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch in United States v. Texas and in Garland v. Vanderstock. I don't think there is much point parsing Doe v. Mills further. (I wrote about Barrett's concurrence in Mills here and here). If Justice Barrett thought there was some reason to grant a stay in Vanderstock, she could have told us. But she said nothing--even with an extra four days to think about it. Doe v. Mills was simply a restatement of the defining feature of Justice Barrett's jurisprudence: caution. And especially cautious where the Fifth Circuit steps out of line.
Progressives should be grateful that the Supreme Court is not the Fifth Circuit.
Update: Steve Vladeck identified eight cases that I did not discuss. I was not looking for death penalty cases, which accounts for Hamm and Crow.
I did not include Ohio v. Department of Labor and NFIB v. OSHA as those cases were decided following oral argument, with a reasoned opinion--not your typical shadow docket fare.
In Milligan, certiorari was granted before judgment. In Ardoin v. Robinson, certiorari was granted before judgment, and the case was held in abeyance while Milligan was pending. This is the case from the Fifth Circuit panel Steve mentioned. In Merrill v. Caster, certiorari was also granted before judgment.
Louisiana v. American Rivers was a stay of an application arising from the Ninth Circuit Clean, without a grant of cert before judgment. I missed that one.
The 14:
1. Crow
2. NFIB
3. Ohio v. DOL
4. Milligan
5. Caster
6. Navy SEALs
7. American Rivers
8. NetChoice
9. Ardoin
10. Hamm v. Smith
11. AZ v. Mayorkas*
12. Danco
13. FDA
14. Vanderstok* — Josh accounts for this by asserting that it doesn't count if the Court granted cert.
— Steve Vladeck (@steve_vladeck) August 9, 2023
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In Law and in Life, “Do The Opposite Of Whatever The Fifth Circuit Did“…seems a pretty good principle to follow. Effect intensified if the 5th Circuit action involves a U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor ruling.
STATES RANKED BY EDUCATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT</b)
(territories included; 52 jurisdictions ranked)
HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA
Louisiana 48
Mississippi 49
Texas 50
COLLEGE DEGREE
Louisiana 49
Mississippi 51
Texas 28
ADVANCED DEGREE
Louisiana 46
Mississippi 51
Texas 34
JASON ALDEAN FANS
Louisiana 8
Mississippi 4
Texas 2
HALF-EDUCATED BIGOTS
Louisiana 12
Mississippi 1
Texas 4
The Fifth Circuit is the dumbest circuit, with supersized sides of bigotry and superstition.
Maybe you'd like to try that next with urban public education achievement? I wonder what you'll find. Somehow I doubt you'll express similar disparaging conclusions.
Do you doubt the Fifth Circuit is the dumbest, most ignorant circuit?
Feel free to try to make a case.
Not a persuasive case.
Any case.
Carry on, clinger.
What percentage of those states is black?
Google is your friend. Louisiana 32.17%; Mississippi 37.5%; Texas 12.13%
STATES RANKED BY EDUCATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT</b)
(territories included; 52 jurisdictions ranked)
HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA
Louisiana 48
Mississippi 49
Texas 50
COLLEGE DEGREE
Louisiana 49
Mississippi 51
Texas 28
ADVANCED DEGREE
Louisiana 46
Mississippi 51
Texas 34
JASON ALDEAN FANS
Louisiana 8
Mississippi 4
Texas 2
HALF-EDUCATED BIGOTS
Louisiana 12
Mississippi 1
Texas 4
The Fifth Circuit is the dumbest circuit, with supersized sides of bigotry and superstition.
Oh no Josh realized his big crush thinks he's an idiot like every girl he ever met that wasn't full of ghb.
Josh- go away. Go far away. You are human waste.
Professor Blackman conspicuously overlooks Justice Bear It's approval of the Fifth Circuit's denial of a stay in Whole Woman's Health v. Jackson, No. 21A24 (September 1, 2021). https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/20pdf/21a24_8759.pdf
I can't believe I am writing something to defend this guy (and yes, he is quite literally the definition of "this guy") but he started the sample in November 2021. Was that convenient. Yes. But that means it isn't overlooked.
That's a weak defense, indeed.
Was there some logic to the selection of the starting date? Why not start at the beginning of a term? No, though it doesn't seem implausible that Josh chose it precisely to avoid having to count Whole Women's Health.
When one trying to prove a point by looking at events between Date X and Date Y you better have a damn good reason for picking those dates.
Shocking news, everyone! Ric Romero with the following news flash!
After a well-known, and concerted effort, by conservative litigants to try out their craziest theories by forum-shopping because they now can choose ideological judges and a partisan circuit, knowing full well that a lot of the panels on the 5th Circuit just ... don't really apply precedent or even have real standards (especially equitable concerns) related to stays, This Guy realizes that the Supreme Court occasionally will step in to check the worst excesses of that Circuit. Not always. But sometimes.
Also breaking news! Dog bites man.
Yes, because conservatives invented forum shopping, obviously.
No. But I mean this quite seriously- I don't recall, at any time that I have practiced, there having been this serious a problem with political (partisan and ideological) forum shopping.
Because of a few idiosyncrasies, we are now seeing a small number of judges continually get all the major cases, continually issue ... questionable ... rulings ... with a 5th Circuit that is far too willing to rubber stamp it. Moreover, the Supreme Court (which isn't exactly liberal, if you hadn't noticed) has to go in and issue stays just to keep things relatively functional.
It's nothing I've seen before in years and years of practice, and makes a mockery of the orderly practice of law. This isn't about results, by the way, this is about the regular abuse of normal procedure (and precedent) from a small number of judges in the 5th.
Memory holing the Warren (and Burger) Court eras, the California Supreme Court, and the just now subsiding Ninth Circuit is quite impressive.
I think we've finally gotten past judges ruling in bad faith the capital punishment violates the 8th Amendment. Yes, certainly there have been constitutional defects in its administration, but enough judges kept finding nits to pick that defies all credibility.
I guess you've never read Ed Whelan's "This Day in Liberal Judicial Activism" posts. The Hawaii federal judge that ruled against Trump's immigration executive order was quite something.
I know you think your ox being gored is unique here. Others disagree obviously. I'm not saying that the 5th is out of control. Just that it's not unique offense you make it out to be. There's a reason people have been making light of the the Ninth's reversal rate (on high profile cases, repeatedly), long before the 5th started offending.
First off, you should hopefully know that most people will not take anyone who quote Ed Whelan seriously.
Second, and I realize that this might be a fine distinction for you- I don't get up in arms over the results. I don't like the results, but it is what it is. I might disagree with, for example, Dobbs. I might disagree with some of the reasoning. But the law changes. That is something I understand.
What you seem to miss is that there is something quite different going on- and it's not an "ox being gored" thing. It has to do with those little things; you know, procedure. The ability to rely on basic bedrock principles of the law and civil procedure to guide you; that is what is falling apart in the 5th.
So while you might think to yourself, "Oh, it's fine. Ima just own the libs for ... um.... THE WARREN COURT! Yeah, that's the ticket!" That's not the issue. I realize that the subtlety of little things like, oh, how Title VII litigation actually works might be lost on you, but these things matter for practitioners. Not just for owning the libs, but for people out there defending businesses.
Thanks for playing.
And, by the way, if you think any of what the 5th COA is doing is "normal," I highly suggest looking at the Sambrano v. United Airlines decisions. If you know anything (and I do mean ANYTHING) about Title VII or litigation, the result is nothing short of shocking, and ... knowingly so.
The idea that they are trying to engage in "one-time only law" for the feels by making unpublished decisions not only makes a mockery of the law, but also disregards the actual practice of law. As Judge Smith correctly noted, courts can't just make "one-time" exceptions. Because it will be cited, even if unpublished, and this provides no guidance. Just uncertainty.
This is what happens when a court devolves into rulings, not rules.
Without looking it up, Sambrano is the case where the Fifth Circuit created an entirely new definition of irreparable harm never before employed by any other court in the history of jurisprudence, right?
Bingo! Got it in one.
It's a case so bad, you know that the Plaintiffs weren't represented by attorneys with any experience litigating Title VII claims, because no one who actually knew the law would have asked for the injunction, given that it would have been considered a frivolous filing.
But hey- 5th Circuit, amirite?
(Seriously, any time you can get Judge Jerry Smith to pen a blistering opinion attacking the legal acumen of the majority, you know you're on to something special. That's right- the same judge that ordered the Obama DOJ to give him their book report on judicial review. That's the Judge Smith that was like ... woah, what the heck are you doing????)
We should all be thankful that the Fifth Circuit is not the Supreme Court, Josh. They have no respect for precedent, good order, or the rule of law.
The fact that the Fifth Circuit is developing a habit of stepping beyond what even this Supreme Court can stomach ought to tell you something, you bumbling idiot.
Once again I'll say that outcome based judging and handicapping is an illegitimate exercise. As lawyers like to remind others, procedural rulings do not necessarily reflect on the merits.
The good professors looks like he's trying to find inconsistency based on shadow docket outcomes (issue winners and losers), not the legal question being decided here and previously.
Et tu, Barrett? Is Josh about to start giving her the John Roberts treatment?
The reaction continues to eat its own children.