Ramos was convicted in the
stabbing death of a female acquaintance after a two-day trial on evidence so
shaky that two of the twelve jurors voted not guilty. At the Supreme Court,
Justice Neil Gorsuch noted that the 10-2 jury vote would have resulted in a
mistrial in all but two of the fifty states, all except Louisiana and Oregon. Gorsuch
led an ideologically diverse five-justice majority in overruling the Court’s
prior decision allowing non-unanimous jury verdicts in criminal cases in state
courts though not in federal courts.
In reversing the earlier decision, Apodaca v.
Oregon (1972), Gorsuch cited the dissenting opinions in that case
joined by such liberal lions as William Douglas, William Brennan, and Thurgood
Marshall. The new decision came as no surprise and, in some sense, Gorsuch
the only justice to describe himself publicly as a “committed” originalist
was the one to write it.
Gorsuch channeled not the
Warren Court sensibilities of protecting criminal defendants, but James
Madison’s views in writing trial by jury into the Bill of Rights. Madison and
the states that ratified the Sixth Amendment, Gorsuch reasoned, all understood
the right to trial by jury to adopt the practice of jury unanimity inherited from
English common law.
The Supreme Court had the
same understanding about jury unanimity in criminal cases, Gorsuch explained,
until the “strange turn” that it took in the 1972 decisions. The Court divided
4-1-4 in letting Louisiana and Oregon use 10-2 verdicts in criminal cases after
they adopted those “unconventional schemes,” respectively, in 1898 and 1934.
The pivotal vote came from Justice Lewis F. Powell, the only justice who
thought the Sixth Amendment could have a different meaning in state than in
federal courts.
Gorsuch and Kavanaugh,
President Trump’s two appointees on the Court, both won confirmation after
professing due regard for the doctrine of stare decisis,
with its deference to past decisions. Three decades earlier, Clarence Thomas
made the same obeisance to precedent to win confirmation, but began within his
first few months on the bench his now common practice of voting or calling for
reversing prior decisions based solely on his superior understanding of
constitutional law.
To show his bona fides, Gorsuch
performed a sleight of hand: the prior decisions “lacked precedential effect,”
he explained, because of the odd lineup. Kavanaugh joined but felt impelled to
lay out his reasons for voting to overturn 48-year-old precedents despite
stare decisis. A prior decision, he explained, must be “not
just wrong but grievously or egregiously wrong.” In addition, the prior
decision must have produced “significant negative jurisprudential or real-world
consequences.” And, as a third consideration, the question must be asked
whether overruling the precedent would “unduly upset reliance interests.”
In several Supreme Court
skirmishes on abortion rights so far, Kavanaugh has shown himself to be no fan
of women’s right to choose. Thus, he voted to uphold the Trump administration’s
efforts to prevent a pregnant Central American teenager from getting an abortion while
in custody after crossing the border illegally. When he votes to overrule
Roe v. Wade, no one but Maine’s Republican senator Susan
Collins will be the least bit surprised. It will be no reach at all for
Kavanaugh to check his three boxes before casting aside the 1973 precedent that
the Rehnquist Court voted to reaffirm in 1992 after full-dress reconsideration.
Kavanaugh is successor to
Anthony Kennedy, one of the three
Republican-appointed justices who cast the pivotal votes to save
Roe in that decision, Casey v. Planned
Parenthood. In their joint opinion, Kennedy, Sandra Day O’Connor, and
David Souter explained that generations of American women had come to rely on
the right to choose in ordering their professional and personal lives. That is
precedent, but perhaps in Kavanaugh’s mind mere dictum.
Gorsuch showed himself in
his first term to have no qualms about overruling prior decisions by joining in
the 5-4 decision in Janus v. AFSCME (2018) to overturn an
important 40-year-old precedent for public employee unions. For Kavanaugh, his
vote in Ramos represents his first to reverse a prior
decision and perhaps the precedent he needs to justify his next.
The question remains whether Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wants
to be remembered for presiding over a 5-4 decision to leave women’s
reproductive rights to the mercies of Republican legislators in red states eager
to reduce those rights to practical insignificance. The Court is already
considering in a pending case, Russo v. June Medical Services,
a Louisiana law that effectively reduced the state to a single abortion clinic.
In oral arguments, Roberts
and Kavanaugh both seemed to be reaching for a rationale to uphold the
Louisiana law even though identical to a Texas law that the Court struck down
two years earlier. Thus, the showdown on abortion rights may still be yet to
come, but Kavanaugh has given cause for concern to those who expect him to vote
no as soon as he can.
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