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LEGAL METHODS: UNDERSTANDING AND USING CASES AND STATUTES (2nd Ed.)
How should students begin their legal education? Professor Peter
Strauss's innovative materials build on a Columbia Law School commitment
reaching back to Karl Llewellyn's Bramble Bush -- that legal education
should start with orientation to the materials lawyers use and the
institutions they deal with. Professor Strauss focuses on the skills
beginning law students need for using cases, statutes, and secondary
materials in their education. He does so by following the development
across time of American legal doctrines about product liability and
workplace injury, caselaw and statutory, and of the institutions that
created those doctrines, judicial and legislative.
Along the way, students encounter not only the appellate opinions
typical of law school teaching materials, but also lawyers' arguments
and briefs, considerable stretches of legislative history materials, and
a good deal of secondary literature -- largely, excerpts bearing on the
continuing controversies over statutory interpretation.
Cases are relatively few, and lightly edited, as they
should be in beginning materials. They are presented in historical
order, in an arrangement suggested by Llewellyn's work and by Grant
Gilmore's short "Ages of American Law," with interspersed textual
materials and notes intended to focus student attention on the skills of
case reading and case synthesis. For the first few, excerpts from the
reports of counsels' arguments are included; teachers using these
materials will easily be able to convey how lawyers' arguments, as well
as judicial analyses, shape opinions. Students experiencing the
development of product liability doctrine from early Nineteenth Century
to early Twenty-first will discover for themselves the engines and the
malleability of the common law, the differences between great judges and
poor ones, the necessary connections between developing society and
social institutions, and developing law. Care has been taken to see to
it that the great judges predominate, although not always their greatest
work.
Statutes, present from the beginning, emerge as one works
through the materials as an increasingly important source of law --
today, the dominant source of law -- and with them come the disputes
over interpretation. Over half the book is concerned with questions of
statutory development and interpretation and, to a limited extent, the
emergence as well of administrative agencies responsible for the
implementation of statutory regimes. Professor Strauss insists, as few
such materials do, that students encounter statutory problems through
lawyers' eyes, not judges'. Thus, the first extensive set of statutory
materials concerns the Federal Railroad Safety Appliances Act of 1893, a
two-page, eight-section statute mandating the use (inter alia) of
automatic couplers on "cars." Students are asked first to identify
interpretive problems in relation to three problems lawyers would have
encountered before any court saw the statute -- two of them involving
considerable client investment. Next, they are asked to read edited
materials from the legislative history, and excerpts from ICC reports
about the statute and its implementation during the period between
enactment and effective date. These are, of course, materials the
General Counsel of the Southern Pacific would have had available to him
and been interested to know about, long before the statute got to court.
Only then do students encounter judicial opinions.
Subsequent materials bearing on statutory interpretation
explore the move from formalism to realism and back again, with careful
attention to the changing character of Congress over the years. Both
the New Deal changes and contemporary debates are thoroughly explored,
through caselaw and secondary literature. Again, Congress and lawyers'
work with its output are put into the foreground. Here the focal
problem concerns the possibility of reimbursing litigating expenses for
parents who successfully sue to force special educational arrangements
for their children. The materials begin with a statutory problem, next
illuminated by excerpts from Supreme Court briefs. The Court's decision
follows, as does Congress's prompt and emphatic repudiation of that
decision -- legislative materials whose changed character from those of
the RSA will be evident and provocative for discussion, and which leave
open the problem your students are asked to resolve.
A subsequent series of decisions by the Court answer questions no Member
of Congress may have known to ask; do they now control the problem put?
Divided decisions of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals (2003) and of
the Supreme Court (2006) explore the debates, on the merits and on
statutory technique. The materials conclude with excerpts from the
secondary literature debates; brief further attention to the problem of
agency statutory interpretation (Chevron and its sequelae); interpretive
problems drawing on three very recent Supreme Court decisions revealing
the fracture lines over interpretive issues; and a thoughtful essay on
the problems of contemporary judging by the Hon. Gerard Lynch, long
Prof. Strauss's colleague and now a judge of the US District Court for
the Southern District of New York.
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