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Wednesday, May 06, 2009
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
"Empathy" Versus Law: Part II
by Thomas Sowell
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The great Supreme Court justice Oliver Wendell Holmes is not the kind of justice who would have been appointed under President Barack Obama's criterion of "empathy" for certain groups.

Like most people, Justice Holmes had empathy for some and antipathy for others, but his votes on the Supreme Court often went against those for whom he had empathy and for those for whom he had antipathy. As Holmes himself put it: "I loathed most of the things in favor of which I decided."

After voting in favor of Benjamin Gitlow in the 1925 case of Gitlow v. People of New York, Holmes said in a letter to a friend that he had just voted for "the right of an ass to drool about proletarian dictatorship." Similarly, in the case of Abrams v. United States, Holmes' dissenting opinion in favor of the appellants characterized the views of those appellants as "a creed which I believe to be the creed of ignorance and immaturity."

By the same token, Justice Holmes did not let his sympathies with some people determine his votes on the High Court. As a young man, Holmes had dropped out of Harvard to go fight in the Civil War because he opposed slavery. In later years, he expressed his dislike of the minstrel shows that were popular at the time "because they seem to belittle the race."

When there were outcries against the prosecution of Sacco and Vanzetti in the 1920s, Holmes said in a letter, "I cannot but ask myself why this so much greater interest in red than black. A thousand-fold worse cases of negroes come up from time to time, but the world does not worry over them."

Yet when two black attorneys appeared before the Supreme Court, Holmes wrote in another letter to a friend that he had to "write a decision against a very thorough and really well expressed argument by two colored men"-- an argument "that even in intonation was better than, I should say, the majority of white discourses that we hear."

Holmes understood that a Supreme Court justice was not there to favor some people or even to prescribe what was best for society. He had a very clear sense of what the role of a judge was-- and wasn't.

Justice Holmes saw his job to be "to see that the game is played according to the rules whether I like them or not."

That was because the law existed for the citizens, not for lawyers or judges, and the citizen had to know what the rules were, in order to obey them.

He said: "Men should know the rules by which the game is played. Doubt as to the value of some of those rules is no sufficient reason why they should not be followed by the courts." Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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Thanks Dr. Sowell
......as the White House feverishly reviews its Socialist short list for our next Supreme Court Socialist, errrrrr, Justice.

I wonder if any thought has been given to William Ayers? Or maybe his lovely wife Bernadette?

Courts are of equity as well as law
Although Thomas Sowell makes an important point, the situation is, as I am fond of saying, not as simple as that. Our courts are courts of equity as well as of law, and law does not specify the way to make decisions on all the issues that can come before a court. Yes, where the law does specify, it should be applied, if it is constitutional according to the best historical evidence we can find on its original meaning. But that still leaves a lot unspecified, and that is where "justice", that is, considerations of fairness or equity, can be properly applied.

It is equity that can enable an appeals court to require a new trial if evidence is found to prove innocence. The law would allow the evidence to be ignored, once the defendant has been convicted. There is no constitutional or statutory right to retrial if new evidence is found. That is the court exercising its equity jurisdiction.
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