Sunday, October 06, 2013
Sunday Reflection: Court as Temple
This is the paper I presented yesterday:
Appeal as Pilgrimage,
Court as Temple
By Mark Osler
Presented at the 2013
William and Mary Annual Symposium for
Pilgrimage Studies
Introduction
On a
bright morning in 2008, I sat quietly in a temple. It was far from home, but remarkable: the outside is constructed with stout blocks
of Vermont marble, the inside surfaces of Spanish marble with delicate ivory
veins. We sat quietly in rows, having
come from every destination, peering around at our intimidating
surroundings. Looking back at us from
the South wall, compellingly, is Moses bearing the Ten Commandments. Like the others there from New York and
Florida and California and Iowa, I am wearing dark clothing, the drab uniform
of conformity. I was anonymous there,
all the more because each aspect of the temple was intentionally constructed to
leave me humbled.
In the Temple
of Justice (which is what the Supreme Court Building is really called on the
Supreme Court web site),[1]
the Justices sit high above and before us, wearing robes of authority. A guard stands watch in our midst,
vigilantly watching for the slightest wrong move. We are humble guests before that which
Americans worship. We are pilgrims of
the Constitution.
There can be
little doubt that the Constitution has to some degree replaced the Bible as a
source of public values in America. 2010
U.S. Senate Candidate Christine O’Donnell was in step with many Americans when
she described the Constitution as a “covenant” based on “divine principles.”[2] This tendency is neither new nor limited to
the political fringe; Woodrow Wilson criticized what he saw as an
“undiscriminating and almost blind worship of its principles....”[3]
Of course,
there is much to love about the Constitution as a source of principles. They are, after all, good principles: That freedom should be respected, that
concentrated power is dangerous, that individuals have inherent rights such as
freedom of speech and religion, and even (through the pardon power) that mercy
must have a role in human societies. Those
who conflate these principles with Christianity are mistaken,[4]
but those Constitutional principles stand alone as a strong and coherent belief
system, at least in relation to governments and citizens.
If we view the
Constitution as a text bearing higher truths, and the Supreme Court as a temple
of those truths, the long trek of an appellate lawyer can fairly be called a
pilgrimage. Though the experience is
shared by few, it embodies both the key premises and the defining experiences
of pilgrimage.
Defining Appellate Advocacy as Pilgrimage
In looking to
define a pilgrimage before holding appellate advocacy up to that template, I
lean heavily on the work of George Greenia,[5]
who has been my friend and guide as I tiptoe into the field of pilgrimage studies. It is his lead that I follow in first looking
to the work of Linda Davidson and David Gitlitz in defining the premises of
pilgrimage.[6]
Davidson and
Gitlitz describe three fundamental premises of a pilgrimage. The first is a “conviction that there are
forces larger than ourselves—gods, superheroes, the tectonic plates of
history—forces with the ability to influence our lives.” The second is “an ability to potentially
initiate a meaningful relationship with those forces,” and the third is that
there are particular places where the power of those forces reside.
Each of these
premises neatly fit the experience of appellate advocacy.
As to the
first premise, the enterprise itself reveals the belief in practitioners that
there are greater forces at work: After
all, the advocate is going to that greater force, the force of law, and asking
for a specific outcome. I love the
phrase “the tectonic plates of history,” because that precisely describes what
we lawyers hope to influence as we argue for desegregation, or the freedom of
corporations to express themselves through unlimited political spending, or by
pressing for a societal recognition of same-sex marriage. In our secret dreams, we are the ones who
convince the gods of the law to move those tectonic plates.
That dream
both leads to and fulfills the second premise, that the pilgrim believes that
she can “potentially initiate a meaningful relationship with those forces.” That
describes exactly the goal of the appellate advocate, who seeks to harness the
law, the Constitution, or both, through the power of the court. We seek a relationship with the law that is
ongoing, since it is rare that a single case will resolve an issue in one fell
swoop. More typical is what we call a
“line” of cases, each influenced by its predecessor and the pilgrims who
pressed it forward.
Finally, the
third premise asserts that a true pilgrimage involves travel to a particular
place where those powerful forces reside.
A simple image resolves this question:
The Temple of Justice, with its gleaming white pillars and marble stairs. We must travel to it to press our case, to
seek that meaningful relationship with the law, and if we do not we forfeit the
chance for that engagement. The country
lawyer from a dusty town in Texas travels to the Fifth Circuit courthouse in
New Orleans; the attorney from Vermont drives his pickup down to the canyons of
New York to argue in the Second Circuit, and we come from everywhere to ascend
those marble steps in Washington DC in the fittingly (and oddly spiritually)
named “Supreme” Court.
Extending
these three basic premises, Greenia has posited seven complementary aspects
describing the experience of being a
pilgrim:
1) A belief in the
transcendent
2) A connection to
memory
3) An ability to
resist time itself
4) Elision of self
5) The invitation to
a high-value performance
6) A body-centered
enterprise
7) Incompleteness
I will address each in turn.
First, drawing
from the first premise above, Greenia looks for a motivating belief in the
transcendent—a belief that at least implies that there is something greater
than the pilgrim and the community she is from.
Law in our nation is constructed in precisely this way. The municipal ordinance, however beloved,
must give way to the Constitution if they conflict. A community belief in, say, racial
segregation, is transcended quite literally by the power of the Constitution
and the Court. Importantly, this is not
a physical power, for the Court has no troops, has no coercive arm. The transcending of local norms and
individual actions is by power of moral compulsion alone.
Second,
Greenia suggests that pilgrimage has something to do with memory. As he puts it, “Pilgrim paths lead deep into
ancient times when the collective enjoyed clear consensus.” Such is our belief in the Constitution, and
our discussions of the framers of the republic and their work as a unique
“Constitutional Moment” of particular inspiration.[7] Mythology and reverence hang like mist around
the (relatively) ancient time when that collective of men forged a document
which did, in fact, find consensus among the states.
Third, Greenia
suggests that pilgrimage somehow involves the ability to resist time
itself. Pilgrims become a part of sacred
memory going forward. Just as we see
ancient roots in what we do, appellate advocates seek directly to create memory
going forward—they want to create precedent.
As the Constitution and the law evolve to encompass new realities, the
appellate lawyer wants to create something timeless within that developing
realm, a rule for the future.
Fourth,
pilgrimage experiences require a certain elision of self, or what Greenia calls
a surrender of individualism. This is
true for the appellate lawyer at two levels.
First, she has traveled to the courthouse not on her own behalf, but
representing someone else. There is
something profound in that, the bare fact that this pilgrimage is almost always
in the name of another. Brown v. Board
of Education bears the name of Oliver L. Brown, a welder and father of a
third-grader, not the name of the man who argued that case so well before the
Supreme Court of the United States (Thurgood Marshall). Second, it is often true that the pilgrim
does not want to just win that case,
but to establish a precedent that will govern other cases. In other words, the pilgrimage seeks to
transform not only the pilgrim, and not even just the pilgrim and the person
she represents, but the body of law itself.
Fifth, Greenia
suggests that “pilgrimage invites a high-value performance on the part of the
traveler.” There are few pilgrimages for
which this is more true than for the appellate lawyer, who is called on to
stand before the judges and perform. It isn’t optional; the performance is the
reason for the journey.
Perhaps least
relevant, at least at a superficial level, is Greenia’s sixth aspect of the
pilgrimage experience, that it be at some level a body-centered
enterprise. Upon closer examination,
however, the courtroom experience is a veritable Kabuki theater of ritualized
movement. All rise when the judges or
justices arrive, and again when they depart.
When arguing, the advocate must stand within one arms-length of the
podium or risk censure by the court. If
called upon while at the counsel table, the lawyer must rise for that, as well,
and remain standing so long as she is conversing with the court. Moreover, each of these movements have
meaning; they are part of the dance of deference to the court that must be performed
again and again for the artificially constructed hierarchy of authority to be
maintained.
Finally, we
come to Greenia’s seventh element of the pilgrimage experience: Incompleteness. No pilgrim completes a pilgrimage with a
sense they have exhausted the experience, that the story is finished. So it is, powerfully, with the appellate
experience. Most obviously, the judges
almost never declare an outcome—the pilgrims go home not knowing the success or
failure of their quest. Even with that
aside, there is a deep incompleteness to even the most consequential appellate
case. Advocates are inevitably left to
sort through innumerable loose ends—enforceability, retroactivity, scope of the
precedent—and the road is never quite at an end.
Thurgood Marshall, Legal Pilgrim
One delight of
the legal pilgrimage, like many others, is to remember the people who have
traveled the same road before. Pilgrimage
is not necessarily about the present; it is at times more of a pregnant space
between the weight of the past and the creation of the future.
The past, in
American courts, holds the legacy of one of our greatest litigators, Thurgood
Marshall. Before becoming a Justice of
the U.S. Supreme Court, Marshall was an appellate advocate both in the Supreme
Court and in courts across the south. His
pilgrimage was significantly different, though, because of the realities of
race in that time. A moment probably
came, in some southern courthouse, where Marshall walked out after an argument,
tired and parched. He could not, though,
use the first water fountain he came to, because it was marked “whites.”
Marshall’s
preparation for an argument became ritual.
He prepared tabbed notebooks containing the cases he might need, to be
kept readily at hand. He obsessed over
briefs, willing them to perfection. For
a week before an argument, he would drink one, and only one, glass of wine with
his dinner.[8] Then he took the train to Washington, where
he won 29 of 32 cases in the United States Supreme Court. While there, he and his assistants were often
forced by segregation to stay in “negro” hotels, which Constance Baker Motley
described as “no more than a rooming house in a ‘Negro’ residential area.”[9]
The success of
Thurgood Marshall was driven by his belief in the Constitution as singularly
important document. He famously
memorized the entire thing at age 16, and one of his assistants at the NAACP reflected
that Marshall had been taught at Howard Law School that the Constitution was “a
powerful force, heretofore virtually untapped, that should be used for social
engineering in race relations.”[10]
When a lawyer
comes to Washington today from some far-off place, she is well aware of those
who came before. Within that history
lies the thrill of re-creating it endlessly—that the experience of Thurgood
Marshall in re-making the law is, in some small way, the same as each of those
who come to create the legal future.
From the Steps
I wasn’t alone
that morning at the Temple of Justice in 2008.
I had brought two of my students from Waco with me: Matt Acosta and
Dustin Benham. We had written a brief in an important sentencing case,
Kimbrough v. United States,[11] which
challenged strict sentencing guidelines in crack cocaine cases. I was not arguing the case; instead we got to
sit with the reverent crowd and watch the Justices at work.
While
preparing our briefs, Matt Acosta and Dustin Benham had raised an intriguing
point: If Congress wanted that
sentencing guideline to be the law rather than just an advisory guideline, they
should have put it into a statute rather than hoping it would be inferred. Congress could have acted, was even invited
to act, in the way the government wanted, but had not. We put it into our briefs, and it was
incorporated into others that were submitted.
At the end of
the argument that day, Chief Justice Roberts, a swing vote, directly challenged
the Deputy Solicitor General, Michael Dreeben.
Roberts’s point was that if Congress had wanted to make the guideline
the law, they could have acted, and they hadn’t. It appeared that the Chief Justice had seen
our argument, and agreed.
Leaving the
court, we went out with others involved in the case at the top of the broad
stairs. There was a buzz; it appeared
the government would lose, and we would win a measure of mercy in crack cases,
given that Roberts was sympathetic. The
buzz was right, and two years later Benham and I would win a follow-up case
holding that sentencing judges could “categorically reject” the strict crack
guidelines.
There is a
graceful moment after an argument where you step out of the cool dark of the
courthouse into the late-morning sun of Washington, DC. Far below you at the bottom of those famous
white steps are the crowds and the news trucks and the bustle of the streets. Looking straight ahead, you can see directly
over the United States Capitol to the green spaces of the Mall, to the Lincoln
Memorial and its matching set of white steps where Martin Luther King, Jr.
spoke about the dream for his children.
I stopped my
two students at the top of those steps, and we took in the view and all that
had happened in silence. We had seen the
tectonic plates of history move. “This,”
I told them, “is as good as it gets.”
Was it a
pilgrimage? If not, then what is?
[1]
http://www.supremecourt.gov/visiting/TempleOfJustice.aspx
[2]
Andrew Romano, Tea Party Evangelists
Claim the Constitution as Their Sacred Text.
Why That’s Wrong, Daily Beast, October 17, 2010, available at http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2010/10/17/how-tea-partiers-get-the-constitution-wrong.html
[3]
Edward S. Corwin, The Worship of the
Constitution, 4 Constitution Review 3 (1920). Corwin’s belief was that the Constitution has
been revered as a source of values nearly from the very time of its
ratification.
[4] I have set out this argument elsewhere. Mark Osler, Aseret Had’Varim in Tension: The
Ten Commandments and the Bill of Rights, 49 Journal of Church and State 683
(2007); Mark Osler, A Biblical Value in
the Constitution: Mercy, Clemency,
Faith, and History, 9 University of St. Thomas Law Journal 769 (2012).
[5]
Much of my guidance is gleaned from the draft of a work in progress he kindly
provided me, which is to be part of an anthology for those like myself who are
new to pilgrimage studies.
[6]
Davidson, Linda Kay & David Gitlitz, Pilgrimage: From the Ganges to Graceland: An
Encyclopedia. 2 Vols. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2002.
[7]
The term “Constitutional Moment” is most often associated with Bruce Ackerman
and his 1993 book, We The People.
Ackerman recognizes these moments not only at the time the Constitution
was framed, but periodically thereafter.
[8]
Howard Ball, A Defiant Life: Thurgood
Marshall and the Persistence of Racism in America, p. 71 (Crown Publishers
1998).
[9] Constance Baker Motley, My Personal Debt to Thurgood Marshall, in Thurgood Marshall: Justice for All, p. 163 (Carrol & Graf
Publishers 1992, Roger Goldman & David Gallen, eds.).
[10] Robert Carter, A Tribute to Thurgood Marshall, in Thurgood Marshall: Justice for All, p. 190 (Carrol & Graf
Publishers 1992, Roger Goldman & David Gallen, eds.).
[11]
552 U.S. 85 (2007).
Comments:
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This is fascinating. I would have never thought to apply the word "pilgrimage" to what you're describing, but you've made an excellent case.
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