The Volokh Conspiracy
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Randy Kozel on the Law of En Banc Review
A welcome paper analyzing the practice of en banc review on the federal circuit courts.
When should circuit courts grant en banc review to panel decisions? Is it enough that a majority of judges on the court think that a given three-judge panel was wrong? Or are there some panel decisions that are "wrong, but not en-banc-worthy"? And to what extent should en banc review be used to resolve circuit splits?
Notre Dame law professor Randy Kozel has a new paper examining enbanc review. The paper, "Going En Banc" is forthcoming in the Florida Law Review (and is now available on SSRN). As described in the abstract, the article "examines the law of en banc review in the federal courts of appeals" and "explores key doctrinal questions and advances a theory that maintains the primacy of three-judge panels by focusing the en banc process on a specialized set of institutional tasks."
Like some judges, the Professor Kozel concludes that en banc review should reflect something more than a concern that a panel erred. Here is his conclusion:
En banc courts are vast in power but limited in purview. The argument for en banc review is strongest in the face of a conflict between courts. Absent a conflict, judges should be reluctant to go en banc based on disapproval of a panel's conclusion. Disagreement alone isn't enough to rev up the engine of en banc review, for the en banc tribunal is something other than a "hybrid intermediate court." Off-panel judges should invoke the en banc process sparingly, and only after careful consideration of the economic, relational, and structural consequences. It is the rare case that warrants en banc review, and the rarest of the rare that does so in the absence of a conflict among courts.
For those interested in the work of federal appellate courts, this article is definitely worth a read.
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Unless the subject is guns, and its the 4th or 9th circuit. Special rules apply!
Or the subject is felons voting and its the 11th circuit.
I'm sorry but no. Just no. The goal is justice, not judicial efficiency. If the lower court got it wrong, that has real consequences for the people involved. Their individual lives and livelihoods should not be sacrificed on the collectivist altar of "economic, relational, and structural consequences".
With thousands of cases a year, which adds up to hundreds of thousands of briefs to sort (who has time to read all that?), en banc and Supreme Courts must triage and prioritize cases. The other issue, the losing side almost always claims the decision is wrong, unjust, and of utmost importance, often invoking world-ending apocalyptic consequences.
The apocalyptic claims of the losing party are not relevant to the thesis above. The article argues that even if the en banc court thinks the lower decision is wrong, that's not enough to justify intervening. That's just wrong.
In a universe of infinite time and money, sure. Lots of panel opinions are wrong, the court still has to pick and choose. Plus, “wrongness” is not an objective quantity in law. An opinion is only wrong if someone can persuade someone to vote differently. We will likely disagree which appellate opinions are wrong.
Worse than en banc courts leaving wrong opinions in place: results oriented judges overturning legally correct opinions.
Talk me through why the latter is worse than the former (practically rather than morally.)
Each case involves the wrong litigant winning. And if the policy is to leave wrong panel decisions in place except in egregious cases the wrongness preserved is likely to greatly exceed the wrongness introduced by the other policy.
Both are goals.
En banc review is not about "lower courts." It's about overturning a panel of the circuit court.
I think the "questions of exceptional importance" standard on page 33 is underrated. It may well reflect actual practice. If the panel got it wrong in a normal case, let it go. Thomas wrote a concurrence a few years ago agreeing that the Fifth Circuit got it wrong but certiorari should not have been granted based on the "misapplication of a properly stated rule of law" standard. If the panel got it wrong in a high stakes nationwide injunction case, take a closer look.
The Second Circuit grants en banc review about as often as Donald Trump tells the truth; they really take the "disagreement with the panel is not enough to justify review" to heart. I honestly think it might be easier to get a cert grant from SCOTUS if one disagrees with a 2nd Circuit panel than to get en banc relief.
If the panel of the Appeal Court can be overturned by the en banc Appeal Court, it’s a lower court by definition.
That both groups of robey guys are formally judges of the Nth Circuit Court of Appeals does not alter that fact.