The Volokh Conspiracy
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Justice Kavanaugh Tells Fifth Circuit that "Shadow Docket" Places Pressure on Supreme Court
Some interesting comments at the Fifth Circuit Judicial Conference
Justice Brett Kavanagh spoke at the Fifth Circuit Judicial Conference in Austin, Texas today. According to a Bloomberg report, he discussed the "pressure" created by emergency filings, including appeals of nationwide injunctions or other extraordinary relief entered by lower courts. From a Bloomberg report:
Speaking Friday in Austin, Texas, Kavanaugh lamented the strain the expedited timeline places on the justices and said it leads to decreased output in other areas.
"This puts pressure on us," he said during remarks at a US Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit conference. "We're appellate judges; we don't like making snap decisions or decisions without lots of briefs or lots of lower court opinions. It's a challenge for us. I think we're dealing with it as best as we can in an imperfect situation."
Kavanaugh, in response to a question from moderator Fifth Circuit Chief Judge Priscilla Richman, said that in order to decide emergency issues the court must "take a peek at the merits, and that's really hard." This becomes circular, he said, "because we're going to decide the merits a couple of years from now." . . .
Resolving issues on the emergency docket is keeping the court from writing more opinions in merits cases, Kavanaugh said. . . .
"It occupies a lot of time," he said.
It is interesting that he made these remarks at the Fifth Circuit judicial conference, as the Fifth Circuit has been responsible for more than its fair share of "shadow docket" filings.
Justice Kavanaugh also indicated that he thinks the Supreme Court should hear more cases -- more like 75 per term instead of 60. As I have noted on this blog, Justice Kavanaugh often votes to grant certiorari in cases the Court ultimately denies.
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"It is interesting that he made these remarks at the Fifth Circuit judicial conference, as the Fifth Circuit has been responsible for more than its fair share of 'shadow docket' filings."
Now that is a good use of understatement.
“This becomes circular, he said, “because we’re going to decide the merits a couple of years from now.””
Except that SCOTUS almost certainly won’t be deciding the merits a few years later. Look at the percentage of cert petitions denied compared to the percentage of those granted.
I thought the problem was that they were lazy SOBs in charge of deciding their own workload.
"It is interesting that he made these remarks at the Fifth Circuit judicial conference, as the Fifth Circuit has been responsible for more than its fair share of 'shadow docket' filings."
The Fifth Circuit is not responsible for any shadow-docket filings. The parties that file for emergency relief are responsible for the shadow-docket filings. That's like saying SCOTUS is responsible for ruling on the shadow-docket cases. It has to rule on them one way or another. The same is true of the Fifth Circuit. It makes rulings on motions brought to it because it has to. Sometimes people or the government don't like the Fifth Circuit's ruling, so they take it to SCOTUS. That's completely outside the Fifth Circuit's hands. And if the Fifth Circuit takes too long to rule, then people complain about that.
It's weird how many of such cases come from the Fifth Circuit, then! Could it perhaps be that it's the nature of the Fifth Circuit's conduct that leads to so many such applications to SCOTUS?
Why, if the filing keep coming in at this rate, they might have to start working in the summer!
This shadow docket business sounds like the only way to achieve that speedy justice which King John and the barons agreed to give us.
It’s worth it, even if the judges feel under pressure.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a01QQZyl-_I
'There must be some way to stop this' says man who is one of the very few in this country who could stop this.